Shah Jalal

Hazrat Shah Jalal Yemeni Mujarrad al Naqshbandi

Entrance of Shah Jalal Mazar
Religion Islam
Personal
Born 1246 CE
Konya, Sultanate of Rum (now in Turkey)
Died 1346 (aged 99100)
Sylhet, Bengal (now in Bangladesh)
Senior posting
Based in Sylhet (initially Hadramaut)
Title (المجرد) (شيخ المشايخ) Shaykh-al-Mashāykh, Al-Mujarrad Khalifa
Period in office Late 13th century to early 14th century
Predecessor SAhmed Kabir
Successor Shah Farhan aka Shah Paran
Religious career
Post Sufi scholar and mystic
Tomb of Hazrat Shah Jalal in Sylhet
Shah Jalal Mazar Mosque

Shāh Jalāl ad-Dīn al-Mujarrad al Naqshbandi, popularly known as Hazrat Shah Jalal (Arabic: شاه جلال الدين, Bengali: শাহ জালাল), (1271 CE - 15 March 1346 CE) is a celebrated Sufi Muslim figure in Bengal. Jalal's name is associated with the spread of Islam into north-eastern Bengal (Sylhet) through Sufism, part of a long history of travel between the Middle East, Persia, Central Asia and South Asia. According to a tablet inscription found in Amber Khana, he arrived at Sylhet in 1303.[1] The largest airport in Bangladesh, Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport, is named after him.

Historicity

His biography was first recorded in the mid 16th century by a certain Shaikh ‘Ali (d. 1562), a descendant of one of Shah Jalal’s companions. Thus there is a gap of several centuries between the life of the saint and that of his earliest biographer. According to this account, Shah Jalal had been born in Turkestan, where he became a spiritual disciple of Saiyid Ahmad Yasawi, one of the founders of the Central Asian Sufi tradition.[2] Therefore, although his existence is not debated, much of his life story is debated.

Early life and education

Born Jalāl ad-Dīn bin Mahmoud and became a makhdoom, teacher of Sunnah and, for performing prayers in solitary milieu and leading a secluded life as an ascetic, al Mujarrad was postfixed to his name. He was conferred with the title of Shaykh-ul-Mashāykh (Great Scholar). Shah Jalal's date and place of birth is not certain. Various traditions and historical documents differ. A number of scholars have claimed that he was born in 1271 CE in Konya in modern-day Turkey (then in the Sultanate of Rûm) and later moved to Yemen either as a child or adult while many believe he was born in a village called Kaninah in Hadhramaut, Yemen. His mother, Syeda Hasina Fatimah, and his father, Mahmoud bin Mohammed bin Ibrahim, were descendants of Hashemite dynasty of Quraysh of Mecca.[3] His father was a Muslim cleric, who was a contemporary of the Persian poet and Sufi mystic, Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi. Shah Jalal was educated and raised by his maternal uncle Syed Ahmed Kabir in Mecca. He excelled in his studies; became a hafiz and mastered fiqh. He achieved spiritual perfection (Kamaliyyat) after 30 years of study, practice and meditation.[4]

Travel to India

According to legend, one day his uncle, Sheikh Kabir gave Shah Jalal a handful of soil and asked him to travel to India. He instructed him to choose to settle and propagate Islam in any place in India where the soil exactly matches that which he gave him in smell and color.[5] Shah Jalal journeyed eastward and reached India in c. 1300, where he met many great scholars and Sufi mystics.[5]

Later life

During the later stages of his life, Shah Jalal devoted himself to propagating Islam. Shah Jalal became so renowned that the famous traveller Ibn Battuta, then in Satgaon,[6] made a one-month journey through the mountains of Kamarupa north-east of Sylhet to meet him.[7] On his way to Sylhet via Habung, Ibn Batuta was greeted by several of Shah Jalal's disciples who had come to assist him on his journey many days before he had arrived. At the meeting in 1345 CE, Ibn Batuta noted that Shah Jalal was tall and lean, fair in complexion and lived by the mosque in a cave, where his only item of value was a goat he kept for milk, butter, and yogurt. He observed that the companions of the Shah Jalal were foreign and known for their strength and bravery. He also mentions that many people would visit the Shah to seek guidance.[8]

The meeting between Ibn Batuta and Shah Jalal is described in his Arabic travelogue, Rihla (The Journey). Amir Khusrau also gives an account of Shah Jalal's conquest of Sylhet in his book Afdalul Hawaade. Even today in Hadramaut, Yemen, Shah Jalal's name is established in folklore.[9]

The exact date of his death is debated, but he is reported by Ibn Batuta to have died on 20 Dhul Qadah 746 AH (15 March 1346 CE).[10] He left behind no descendants and was buried in Sylhet in his dargah (tomb), which is located in a neighbourhood now known as Dargah Mahalla:

Where he lies, a soul eternal, The much-loved awliya of Allah, Hazrat Shah Jalal.[11]

His shrine is famous in Sylhet and throughout Bangladesh, with hundreds of devotees visiting daily. The largest mosque in Sylhet was built at the Dargah (also one of the largest in Bangladesh).

Legacy

A Public University in Sylhet, Shahjalal University of Science and Technology and the biggest airport in Bangladesh, Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport,the biggest fertiliser factory in country Shahjalal Fertiliser Factory, are named after him. Also many institutions took the name after him, these are Shahjalal IslamI Bank Ltd in Bangladesh, Shahjalal Jam-e Mosque in UK, Shahjalal disability institute in Sylhet.

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shah Jalal Mazar.
  1. Ahmed, Shamsuddin, Inscription of Bengal, vol. iv, Dhaka (1960),p 25
  2. Eaton, Richard M. (1993). The Rise of Islam and the Bengal Frontier, 1204-1760 (PDF). Berkeley: University of California Press.
  3. Rahman, M. F., Hazrat Shah Jalal and 360 Awliya, Deshkaal Publications, Sylhet, 1992, p.12-13
  4. Islam in South Asia in practice source of shuhel-e-yamani By Barbara Daly Metcalf, Published by - Princeton universiti press, 2009. Page 385
  5. 1 2 Karim, Abdul (2012). "Shah Jalal (R)". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  6. Hazrat Shah Jalal O Sylhet er Itihas by Syed Mujtaba Ali, re-published by Utsa Prakashan, Dhaka, 1988, p.60
  7. Rihla 9, 1344
  8. Islam in South Asia in practice By - Barbara Daly Metcalf, Published - Princeton university press Uk 2009, Page 383 - 385.
  9. The rise of Islam and the Bengal frontier, 1204-1760, By Richard Maxwell Eaton, Published by - university of california press, page 76
  10. Rahman, M. F., Hazrat Shah Jalal and 360 Awliya, p.13, Deshkaal Publications, Sylhet, 1992
  11. Ziaul Haque, Md., Hazrat Shah Jalal (R.A): An Epic, p.114, Choitonno Publication, Sylhet, 2015

External links

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