Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pir Meher Ali Shah (Punjabi: پیر مہر علی شاہ, pronounced [piɾ mɛɦəɾ əli ʃaːɦ]; 14 April 1859 – May 1937) was a Punjabi Muslim Sufi scholar and mystic poet from Punjab, British India (present-day Pakistan). Belonging to the Chishti order, he is known as a Hanafi scholar who led the anti-Ahmadiyya movement.
The Shrine of Meher Ali Shah is a 20th-century Sufi shrine that serves as the tomb of the Peer Meher Ali Shah, an early 20th-century Sufi scholar of the Chisti order, [1] who was also a leader of the anti-Ahmadiya movement. The shrine is located within the Islamabad Capital Territory, in the village of Golra Sharif.
The Pir Mehr Ali Shah Arid Agriculture University is named after Chishti Sufi saint Pir Mehr Ali Shah. The University is now working on two mega projects titled DDSDP and ENCIB. There is a centre for precision agriculture and national centre for industrial biotechnology.
Pir Meher Ali Shah: Qadiriyya, Chishti-Nizami: 1859-1937: Golra Sharif: Islamabad: Islamabad Capital Territory: Bayazid Ansari: 1525–1582/1585: Kaniguram: South Waziristan: FATA: Pir Syed Muhammad Channan Shah Nuri, Syed Faiz-ul Hassan Shah, Syed Muhammad Jewan Shah Naqvi, Muhammad Amin Shah Sani, Syed Muhammad Hussain Shah, Pir Syed Khalid ...
Pir Mehr Ali Shah Arid Agriculture University, Rawalpindi. It is located in Rawalpindi almost in the center of twin cosmopolitan cities of Rawalpindi & Islamabad ...
It is known for the Mausoleum of Meher Ali Shah that yearly attracts thousands of devotees. [1] Prior to the arrival of Meher Ali Shah 's ancestors, Golra Sharif was a village in the suburbs of Rawalpindi .
Visitors at the graves of Syed Ghulam Mohiyyuddin Gilani and his father Meher Ali Shah. Ghulam Mohiyuddin died on 22 June 1974 after prolonged illness and was buried next to his father in Golra Sharif.
Pir Meher Ali Shah. To further their religious appeal, the Muslim League also launched efforts to entice Pirs towards their cause. Pirs dominated the religious landscape, and were individuals who claimed to inherit religious authority from Sufi Saints who had proselytised in the region since the eleventh century. [46]