Sayyid Imam Ali Shah | |
Titles: | Qayyum ul Alam |
Birth Date: | 1798 |
Birth Place: | Rattar Chhattar |
Death Date: | 1865 |
Death Place: | Rattar Chhattar |
Canonized By: | Mujaddadiya wa Naqshbandiyya Sufi Order |
Major Shrine: | Makan Sharif, Rattar Chattar |
Feast Day: | Urs commemoration, 12th Shawwal |
Influences: | Abdul Qadir Gilani, Bahauddin Naqshband, Hazrat Ishaan, Imam Rabbani |
Influenced: | Sayyid Mir Fazlullah Agha and his descendants |
Abu al Barakat Sayyid Imam Ali Shah (1798-1865) was a senior Indian Sufi Saint. He was of the Qadiri Naqshbandi Sufi Order. He is from Rattar Chhattar a village in Punjab that is called "the noble sanctuary" (Makan Sharif) in his honor. In the Qadiri Naqshbandi Sufi Order he is venerated as the "sustainer of the order in the world" (Qayyum ul Alam).
Ali Shah was born in Rattan Chattar to the Sufi Saint Sayyid Hussain Shah as member of a Naqvi Sayyid family whose genealogy traces back to Muhammad in the 35th generation through Ali al-Hadi's son Sayyid Jafar al Zaki. Sayyid Hussain Shah was known as a revered ascetic and died when Ali Shah was young. He then lived with his maternal grandparents together with his mother and brother. Ali Shah was educated in Islamic Law (Fiqh) and Medicine and attended lectures in philosophy (Kalam) and Metaphysics (Sufism) at the Shrine of Fariduddin Ganjshakar together with his teacher Mawlana Jan Muhammad Chishti and his uncle. After graduating as a certified scholar, Ali Shah served as his uncle's representative.[1] [2]
When his uncle passed away two years after his graduation, Ali Shah participated in missionary activities. He founded a center called "mansion of holiness" (Dar ul Aqdas) where he centered his missionary activities. He was known for integrating philanthropic solutions like nutrition supply as well as establishing a center of Naqshbandi education in which 300 disciples could be instructed. Sources say that 300 goats had to be slaughtered in order to meet the daily demands of visitors and disciples, which reached one hundred thousand followers. His followers were mostly from South and Central Asia.[3] [4]
British Indian investigators mention Ali Shah's popularity and that disciples were "flocking in bands" in order to pay tribute to him. He was described in their reports as a welcoming personality.[5]
Ali Shah is considered an inheritor of Muhammad and is said to emphasize the central importance of noble behavior (Adab) in Sufism.[6]
Imam Ali Shah is venerated by the people of Rattan Chattar as their village's patron saint. Village inhabitants refer to Imam Ali Shah's blessings on the occasion of the lack of casualties during the Indo-Pakistani border skirmirshes in the 70s.[7] He is considered by his followers to be the Mujaddid of the 13th lunar century alongside Imam Ali Shah's companion Sayyid Mir Jan, who acted as contemporary Imam of the Naqshbandiyya.[8] [9]
His descendants include Mir Mazhar ul Qayyum Shah as well as Sayyid Mahfooz Hussein Shah. They furthered Imam Ali Shah's legacy.[10]
His tomb is situated near the Ravi river in the Batala and is considered by Gazetters as an "eye-filling" cultural heritage sight.[11]