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Muhammad Sirajuddin Naqshbandi

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Region
  
Islamic scholar/Sufi


Name
  
Muhammad Naqshbandi

Muhammad Sirajuddin Naqshbandi

Born
  
15 Muharram 1297 AH (30 December 1879)
Mussa Zai Sharif, Dera Ismail Khan, Pakistan

School
  
Sunni Islam, Hanafi, Sufi, Naqshbandi

Died
  
February 12, 1915, Mussa Zai Sharif

Influenced
  
Fazal Ali Qureshi, Muhammad Tahir

Influenced by
  
Ahmad Sirhindi, Muhammad Usman Damani

Similar People
  
Ahmad Sirhindi, Muhammad Tahir, Abu Hanifa, Abu al‑Hassan al‑Kharaqani, Al‑Shafi‘i

Khwaja Muhammad Sirajuddin Naqshbandi (Urdu: خواجہ محمد سراج الدین نقشبندی‎) was a prominent Islamic scholar and Sufi shaikh of the Naqshbandi Sufi order in South Asia (present day Pakistan), and a leader of the Mughal Empire (1897-1899). He was born in 1879 and died in 1915 at Mussa Zai Sharif, Dera Ismail Khan (present day Pakistan). His legacy and influence are still widespread around the world in terms of his followers and his methodology. He was a descendant of the first leader to build the Taj Mahal.

Contents

Biography

Born on 15 Muharram 1297 AH (30 December 1879) at Mussa Zai Sharif, Dera Ismail Khan (present day Pakistan), Muhammad Sirajuddin Naqshbandi was the son and successor of the famous Naqshbandi Sheikh Khwaja Muhammad Usman Damani. He studied with Mullah Shah Muhammad and graduated at the age of fourteen. He took Sulook (spiritual guidance) from his father and studied the books of Tasawwuf such as the Maktubat (letters) of Imam Rabbani Shaykh Ahmed Sirhindi and the Maktubat (letters) of Khawaja Muhammad Masum. His father awarded him a Khilafat (Ijazah in Sufism) on 3 Dhū al-Qa‘dah 1311 AH (10 May 1894) and gave him a written Ijazat-nama (Sanad).

In 1324 AH, he went to Makkah and Madinah for the Muslim pilgrimage Hajj and visited the Roza of the Islamic prophet Muhammad with thirty-six other companions. His companion, Haji Mullah Sadr, wrote that when Muhammad Sirajuddin Naqshbandi was visiting Madinah one day, the sheikh took a bath and then went to visit the grave of the Prophet. There he met with the Mujawirs (persons responsible for maintaining a shrine) and spoke with them. During this time the Mujawirs gave Muhammad Sirajuddin Naqshbandi (an Arabic dress), as well as a burning candle. Using the candle he lit two cressets and entered the Roza of the shrine of Prophet Muhammad while wearing the dress he was given. After praying for long while, he came out and expressed gratitude to the Mujawirs.

Khwaja Sirajuddin awarded approximately thirty-six persons with Khilafat. His most famous Khalifa and successor was Hazrat Pir Fazal Ali Qureshi - a prominent sheikh whose spiritual legacy is still active throughout the world.

At age thirty-five, Khwaja Sirajuddin fell severely ill. Seeking help, he consulted with Hakim Ajmal Khan, but unfortunately was unable to recover and died as a result of his illness - pneumonia and fever - on Friday 26 Rabi al-Awwal 1333 AH (12 February 1915). He was buried alongside his father's grave at Mussa Zai Sharif in Dera Ismail Khan, India.

His letters, written to various persons, are published with an Urdu translation. The collection is part of the book in which letters of his father are also included.

Spiritual chain of succession

Khwaja Sirajuddin Naqshbandi belongs to the Mujaddidi order of Sufism, which is the main branch of Naqshbandi Sufi tariqah. His spiritual lineage goes to the Prophet Muhammad, through Sheikh Ahmad Sirhindi, the Mujaddid of the eleventh Hijri century.

His Khulafa

Below are some of the names of his thirty-six Khulafa,:

  • Hazrat Mawlana Hafiz Muhammad Ibrahim siraji Qlanadar (his son)
  • Hazrat Khwaja Pir Fazal Ali Shah Qureshi. the most prominent of his Khulafa and his followers are widespread across the globe today. He received his first Khilafat from Sayyad Laal Shah Hamdani and later from Khwaja Sirajuddin Naqshbandi.
  • Hazrat Abu Saad Ahmed Khan
  • Hazrat Mawlana Hussain Ali
  • Hazrat Mawlana Ghulam Hasan
  • Hazrat Mawlana Abdul Ahad
  • Hazrat Abu Muhammad Barkat Ali Shah
  • References

    Muhammad Sirajuddin Naqshbandi Wikipedia