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Syed Shah Murshed Ali also known as ‘Huzur Purnur’ was the eldest son and Sajjada nashin of Aala Huzur. He was an accomplished scholar and a unique Sufi poet. His diwan is regarded as one of the most sacred books on Sufism. [6] The second son Syed Shah Ali Murshed was also a saint and his shrine is at Payardanga. The youngest son Syed Shah ...
Mahmud is a significant Saint of the order as he is a direct blood descendant in the 7th generation of Baha al-Din Shah Naqshband, the founder of the order [9] and his son in law Alauddin Atar. [10] It is because of this that Mahmud claims direct spiritual connection to his ancestor Baha al-Din . [ 9 ]
The Qadiriyya (Arabic: القادرية) or the Qadiri order (Arabic: الطريقة القادرية, romanized: al-Ṭarīqa al-Qādiriyya) is a Sunni Sufi order founded by Abdul Qadir Gilani (1077–1166, also transliterated Jilani), who was a Hanbali scholar from Gilan, Iran. [1] The order, with its many sub-orders, is widespread.
Syed Shah Murshed Ali Al-Quadri Al-Jilani was born on Shab-e-Qadr night [1] Friday, the 27th of Ramadan, 1268 A.H /16 July 1852 AD at the Khanqah Sharif of Piyardanga (now West Midnapore). [2] He was the eldest son and Sajjada nashin Syed Shah Mehr Ali Alquadri Al Baghdadi. His mother was Syeda Umm-ul Barkat Khatun Fatima Saniya.
After practicing chilla in complete fasting for forty days, Shah Ali Baghdadi died in c. 1480 and was buried in Mirpur, Dhaka. [5] [6] However, according to a book preserved in his mausoleum, he died in 1577 AD. [1] The Bangladeshi Islamic scholar Nur Muhammad Azmi identifies Shah Ali's year of death as 913 AH (1507 AD). [4]
Syed Tahir Alauddin al-Gilani (السيد طاهر علاؤ الدين الجيلاني البغدادي) (18 June 1932 – 07 June 1991) formally referred to as His Holiness, Qudwat-ul-Awliya Naqeeb-ul-Ashraaf Huzoor Pir Syed Tahir Alauddin al-Gilani al-Qadri al-Baghdadi, was a 20th-century Iraqi [1] Sufi Saint who was the head of the Qadiriyya Baghdadia Spiritual Tariqa.
Muhammad Naushah was born on 21 August 1552 in present-day Punjab, Pakistan to a Punjabi Khokhar family. [2] His father, Hajji Ala’uddin Qadiri, was an ascetic, while his mother Bibi Jiuni belonged to a respectable family.
The Lebanese Hadith scholar, Gibril Haddad stated: [9] "Tarikh Baghdad ("History of Baghdad"), his most important work. Ostensibly a history of Baghdad, it is more specifically a reference work in narrator-authentication (‘ilm al-rijâl) and a valuable compendium of 4,385 hadiths narrated with their full chains, over half of them (2,253) not found in the two books of Sahih and the four Sunan.