Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri Explained

Honorific Prefix:Ḥāfiẓ
Ahmad Jaunpuri
Other Names:Ahmed Jaunpuri
Birth Place:Calcutta, Bengal Presidency
Death Date: (3 Rabi' al-Thani 1290 AH)
Death Place:Sadarghat, Dacca, Bengal Presidency (modern-day Bangladesh)
Resting Place:Chawkbazar Graveyard, Dhaka
Awards:Multiple testimonials from the British Raj
Occupation:Theologian
Father:Karamat Ali Jaunpuri
Predecessor:Karamat Ali Jaunpuri
Successor:Abdur Rab Jaunpuri
Relatives:Abdul Awwal Jaunpuri (brother)
Abdul Batin Jaunpuri (nephew)
Abdur Rab Jaunpuri (nephew)
Rashid Ahmed Jaunpuri (nephew)
Influences:Karamat Ali Jaunpuri
Religion:Islam
Denomination:Sunni
Jurisprudence:Hanafi
Movement:Taiyuni
Influenced:Abdul Latif Chowdhury Fultali
Disciples:Abdur Rab Jaunpuri
Abu Yusuf Muhammad Yaqub Badarpuri
Abdul Latif Taluqdar
Maheruddin Faqir
Background:green

Ḥāfiẓ Aḥmad Jaunpūrī (1834 – 26 January 1899) was an Indian Muslim scholar, religious preacher and social worker. As the son and successor of Karamat Ali Jaunpuri,[1] he led the Taiyuni reformist movement in Bengal.[2]

Early life and family

Ahmad Jaunpuri was born in 1834, in the city of Calcutta, Bengal Presidency, to an Indian Muslim family that traced their ancestry to the Arab tribe of Quraysh. He was the 36th direct descendant of Abu Bakr, the first Rashidun caliph. His father, Karamat Ali Jaunpuri,[3] migrated from Jaunpur in North India with the intention of reforming the Muslims of Bengal. Ahmad Jaunpuri's paternal grandfather, Abu Ibrahim Shaykh Muhammad Imam Bakhsh was a student of Shah Abdul Aziz, and his great-grandfather Jarullah was also a shaykh.[4]

Ahmad Jaunpuri completed his memorisation of the Qur'an at an early age, which led to him earning the title of Hafiz. He proceeded to gained more knowledge in Islamic studies in Lucknow and Jaunpur. Many of his family members were also Islamic scholars, for example, his youngest brother Abdul Awwal Jaunpuri.[2]

Career

He established numerous madrasas and an eidgah in Daulatkhan in Bhola Island. He also provided black seed oil treatment to the locals. He represented the Taiyunis at a debate in 1879 in Madaripur against the Faraizis on the topic of the permissibility of the Friday prayer in British India. The Faraizis discarded Friday and Eid prayers as they considered British India as a Dar al-Harb (house of war). Over five thousand people attended this event and it was dubbed by Nabinchandra Sen as the Battle of Jumuʿah. In 1881, Nawab Abdul Latif gained permission for Jaunpuri to lead the Eid prayer at the Maidan of Calcutta. Over 70,000 Muslims joined the congregation, making it the largest gathering in Calcutta.[5] He wrote a book on Hajera.[6]

Jaunpuri had a cordial relationship with Munshi Mohammad Meherullah.[7]

Jaunpuri contributed to the refurbishment of the Ebadullah Mosque in Barisal. On 26 September 1897, Sir Nicholas Beatson-Bell, the district commissioner of Backergunge, organised a conference at the Barisal Zilla School in which Nawab Sirajul Islam and Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri delivered speeches on the importance of establishing the Bell Islamia Hostel.[8] [9]

He set off to complete Hajj in 1882. During his stay in the Hejaz, he gained a great reception and was acclaimed as an orator. He brought up his nephew Abdur Rab Jaunpuri, and Abu Yusuf Muhammad Yaqub Badarpuri of Sylhet was also his murid and one of his khalifahs (successors).[10] Another successor was Abdul Latif Taluqdar of Mirsarai.[11]

Death

Hafiz Ahmad Jaunpuri was affected by paralysis and was taken to Dacca for treatment. He died on the way in a boat on 26 January 1899 in Sadarghat. His body was washed in the boat, and his janaza was performed at the Chawkbazar Shahi Mosque in Old Dhaka at the request of his disciple, Sheikh Faiz Bakhsh Kanpuri.[12] He was buried just south of the mosque. His biography was written by his nephew Abdul Batin Jaunpuri.[13]

Spiritual genealogy

  1. Prophet Muhammad
  2. Abū Bakr
  3. Salmān al-Fārisī
    1. Al-Qāsim bin Muḥammad Jaʿfar aṣ-Ṣādiq
  4. Abū Yazīd Ṭayfūr al-Bisṭāmī
  5. Abu al-Ḥasan ʿAlī al-Kharaqānī
  6. Abū ʿAlī Faḍl Farmadī
  7. Abū Yaʿqūb Yūsuf al-Hamadānī
  8. ʿAbd al-Khāliq Ghijdawānī
  9. Muḥammad ʿĀrif Riwgarī
  10. Maḥmūd Anjīr Faghnawī
  11. ʿAzīzān ʿAlī Rāmitānī
  12. Sayyid Amīr Kulāl
  13. Muḥammad Bābā as-Samāsī
  14. Sayyid Bahā ad-Dīn Naqshband
  15. Sayyid Mīr ʿAlā ad-Dīn ʿAṭṭār
  16. Yaʿqūb Charkhī
  17. Khwājah ʿUbaydullāh Aḥrār
  18. Khwājah Muḥammad Zāhid Wakhshī
  19. Khwājah Darwesh Muḥammad
  20. Khwājah Muḥammad Amkingī
  21. Khwājah Raḍī ad-Dīn Muḥammad Bāqī Billāh
  22. Aḥmad al-Fārūqī as-Sirhindī
  23. Sayyid Ādam al-Bannūrī
  24. Sayyid ʿAbdullāh Akbarābādī
  25. Shāh ʿAbd ar-Raḥīm Dehlawī
  26. Shāh Walīullāh Dehlawī
  27. Shāh ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz Dehlawī
  28. Sayyid Aḥmad Shahīd
  29. Karāmat ʿAlī Jaunpūrī
  30. Ḥāfiẓ Aḥmad Jaunpūrī

Disciples

Jaunpuri had numerous spiritual successors (khalifas) including:

Notes and References

  1. Book: Islam in Bengal (thirteenth to Nineteenth Century). Sarkar, Jagadish Narayan. Ratna Prakashan. 1972. 74.
  2. Jaunpuri, Hafiz Ahmad. Afaz Uddin, Muhammad.
  3. Book: Hagiology of Sufi Saints and the Spread of Islam in South Asia. 2010. Ismail, Muhammad. 172. Jnanada Prakashan. 9788171393756.
  4. Jaunpuri, Karamat Ali. Hoque, Muhammad Inamul.
  5. Book: 190. Biographical Encyclopaedia of Sufis (South Asia). Hanif, N. Sarup & Sons. 2000. 9788176250870.
  6. Book: 194. bn:বাংলা ভাষায় ইসলামী পুস্তকের তালিকা. bn. Abdur Razzaq, Muhammad. 1977. Islamic Foundation Bangladesh.
  7. Book: 114. 1992. Religious Controversy in British India: Dialogues in South Asian Languages. Ahmed, Rafiuddin. State University of New York Press. Jones, Kenneth W.
  8. Sikdar, Moslemuddin, খান বাহাদুর হেমায়েত উদ্দীন (in Bengali)
  9. Book: bn. বৃহত্তর বরিশালের ঐতিহাসিক নিদর্শন. Bulbul, Saiful Ahsan. Gotidhara. Dhaka. 2012.
  10. Jaunpuri, Abdur Rab. Afaz Uddin, Muhammad.
  11. Book: University of Chittagong. Huda, Muhammad Shehabul. The Saints And Shrines Of Chittagong. 1985. Chittagong. 201.
  12. Book: 309. 1981. কিংবদন্তির ঢাকা. bn. Hossain, Nazir. Azad Muslim Club.
  13. Book: 246. 3. Sufis of India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. 2002. Singh, Nagendra. Kitab Bhavan. 9788171513185.
  14. Book: University of Chittagong. Huda, Muhammad Shehabul. The Saints And Shrines Of Chittagong. 1985. Chittagong. 201.
  15. Book: মওলানা আবদুল আউওয়াল জৌনপুরী. bn. Islamic Foundation Bangladesh. Abdullah, Muhammad. 15. Molana Abdul Auoal Jaunpuri.
  16. Book: Rashid, Abdur. এই সেই ঝালকাঠি. 2001. bn. Al-Islam Publications. Jhalkathi.