(Holy Chishty Orders Of Sufis)
Contribution of Chishti Sufis to Indian culture and society
The message of Khwaja Gharib Nawaz and the
Saints of Chishtiya denomination was
echoed by the Saints of Bhakti movement. The fact that the religious leadership
of the Bhaki movement in the 14th and the 15th centuries came from the lower strata
of Hindu society a section which had been deeply influenced by the Chishty Sufis
and their Khanqah life is too significant to be ignored. Probably never before in
the long history of Hinduism, religious leaders had sprung from those strata of
society to which Chaitanya, Kabir, Nanak, Dhanna, Dadu and others belonged. There
was hardly any Saint of the Bhakti school who had not passed some of his time in
a Khanqah of Chishty Saint.
A mind which failed to see any wisdom or truth in any way of life or thought except
his own, was the greatest obstacle to the growth of syncretistic tendencies. The
Chishty Saints adopted an attitude of sympathy and understanding towards all cults
and creeds. For example Amir Khusrau, an exponent of Chishty ideology and a favourite
and beloved disciple of Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya exhorted his co-religionists :
A-e-K-e-Zebut Tana ba Hindu Bari, Hum Azo Amoz Parastishgari. (O you who sneer at
the idolatry of the Hindu, learn also from him how worship is done.)
This broad and cosmopolitan outlook helped in breaking that spirit of mistrust and
isolation which honeycombed relations between the various culture groups of India
and paved way for rapprochement at all levels, social and ideological. Amir Khusrau
who is, by far, the most powerful exponent of this attitude of Chishty Sufis, refers
to Hindu customs and ceremonials in a spirit which must have been instrumental in
discovering the principles of essential unity between different religions.
Sufi Hameeduddin Nagauri adopted the life style of Rajasthan i peasants. He became
a vegetarian, mixed with the local inhabitants and learnt their language. Baba Farid
lived upon Pelu and dela which grow in Punjab. Eminent Sufis and Yogis used to meet
at his Jamaat Khana to discuss and practise Sufism. His Punjabi poetry which is
full of teachings and mysticism is given place in Guru Grantha Saheb as it was very
much liked by Guru Nanak Ji. Shiekh Nizamuddin Aaulia attracted largest crowds after
Khwaja Moinuddin Hasan Chishti. Thousands of people used to live upon the Langar
distributed from his langar khana. Such people included Muslims as well as Non-Muslims.
His broad-mindedness can be adjudged by the fact that once he saw a procession of
Hindu devotees with music and chanting proceeding towards Jamuna. He uttered “Har
quame raast rahey din-ey wa quibla gahey” i.e. every people has its own path
of righteousness, beliefs and focus of adulation. This shows the inborn sense of
toleration and appreciation of other religious traditions by Chishty Sufis
Chishty Sufi Hazrat Amir Khusro is the embodiment of cultural ethos of India by
being inventor of Sitar and so many Ragas, Raginis, Pahelis, Geet and Sufi renderings
and so he is called Tuti-e-Hind (Nightingale of India)
Music has been another field to which the Chishty saints contributed generously.
They came to realize that, like poetry, music also stimulated emotions to the ecstatic
state, necessary for union with God. The Chishtiya order, sanctioned Sama based
on musical rhythms that enhanced the effect of poetry. They enabled the devotee
to plunge into a state of trance called Haal. The effectiveness of Sama can be gauged
by the fact that many Sufis embraced death while listening to certain poetic lines
which intensely affected their heart. It is said that Khwaja Bakhtiyar Kaki spiritual
successor of Hazrat Khwaja Moinuddin Hasan Chishty (R.A.) surrendered his life while
hearing the following lines:
Kushtagan-e-khanjar-e-taslim ra
Har zamana ghaib jane digarast.
(To those who have been killed by the dagger of submission,There comes new life
every moment from the unseen world.)
Chishty order of Sufis, and their spiritual mission is to shatter the barriers which
stands between man and man for diverse reasons and knit them together in common
bond of fraternity, love, regardless of religion, caste or creed affiliations. We
also believe and practise that God is symbolic of love and the entire humanity in
its diverse form constitute a single family. It is indeed almost a-kin and similar
to the VEDANTA PRINCIPLE “VASU DHEVA KUTUMBAKAM" (THE WORLD IS ONE FAMILY)
Important Dargahs of Chishty Sufis in Indian sub-continent :
1. Hazrat Khwaja Moinuddin Hasan Chishty, Ajmer Sharif.
2. Hazrat Khwaja Qutubuddin
Bakhtiyar Kaki, Delhi (Mehroli)
3. Hazrat Baba Fariduddin Masood Ganj-e-Shakar, Pak Pattan
Sharif, Pakistan
4. Hazrat Nizamuddin Auliya , Delhi
5. Hazrat Alauddin Sabir Kalyari, Kalyar Distt. Rurki (Uttaranchal)
6. Hazrat Nasiruddin Chiragh, Delhi
7. Hazrat Gaisu Daraz Banda Nawaz, Gulbarga Sharif (Karnataka
8. Hazrat Amir Khusro, Delhi
9. Hazrat Sufi Hamiduddin Suwali, Nagaur (Rajasthan).
10. Hazrat Khwaja Fakhruddin Chishty, Sarwar Sharif, Ajmer
11. Hazrat Hisamuddin Jigar Sokhta, Sanbhar Lake (Rajasthan)
12. Hazrat Jamaluddin Hanswi, Hansi (Hariyana).
13. Hazrat Jahangir Ashraf Samnani, Kachocha Sharif (U.P.).
14. Hazrat Waris Ali Shah Dewa Sharif (U.P.)
15. Hazrat Shah Sarang Machgaon, Bara Banki.
S
16. Hazrat Shah Meena, Lucknow (U.P.).
17. Hazrat Bu Ali Shah Kalander, Panipat (Hariyana). B
18. Hazrat Shamsuddin Turk, Panipat (Hariyana)
19. Hazrat Jalaluddin Kabirul Auliya. Jalaluddin Kabirul
Auliya.
20. Hazrat Syed Abdur Razzaque Bansa Sharif, Bara Banki.
21. Hazrat Makhdoom Abdul Haque, Rudoli Sharif, Bara Banki.
22. Hazrat Abdul Quddus Gangohi, Gangoh (Saharanpur)