Shaykh Yaqub Sarfi Kashmiri Sufi | |
---|---|
Title | Sheikh-ul-Islam |
Personal | |
Born | 928 A.H/1521 A.D |
Died | 1005 A.H/1595 A.D Zaina Kadal, Srinagar |
Religion | Islam |
Nationality | Kashmiri |
Children | Muhammad Yusuf |
Parent | Mir Hassan Ghani |
Denomination | Sunni |
Jurisprudence | Hanafi |
Main interest(s) | Aqidah, Hadith, Fiqh, Sufism, Philosophy, Theology, Poetry |
Tariqa | Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani |
Muslim leader | |
Influenced by
| |
Influenced |
Hazrat Ishan Hazrat Shaykh Yaqub Sarfi Kashmiri (1521–1595), popularly known as "Ishan Sahib" was a Kashmiri Alim, Mutasawif, Faqih, poet, author, artist, Mufassir, Muhaddith, philosopher and Sufi Shaikh of the Kubrawi Hamadani order.[1]
Early life
Yaqub born in Srinagar to Mir Hassan Ghani, who was also a scholar. At the age of six or seven he memorized the Quran and started composing its verses in Persian. At nineteen he completed his education under Mawlana Bashir and Mawlana Aini, and he later became the student of Mawlana Abdur Rehman, an Iranian Sufi and poet. Jami gave him the title "Jami-as-Sani" (second Jami), when he got impressed by Sarfi. He then travelled to Central Asia where he received spiritual guidance under Shaykh Kamal Ud Din Hussain Khawarizmi. They both went for pilgrimage (makkah) and he joined the seminar of Ibn Hajar, where he sharpened his knowledge of Quran and Hadith. And after returning from Makkah to Delhi, he met with Mujadid i Alf-i-Sani Sahykh Ahmad Sirhindi and gave him "Ijazat namah" of sacred hadiths and "Irshad namah" of Kubrawi Hamadani order. Badhauni mentioned him in connection of Ibaadat khana.[2][3]
Works
- Sharh-i-Bukhari, a Persian commentary on Shaykh Muhammad Ismail Al Bukhari's Book Sahih al-Bukhari
- Matlabul Talibin-fi-Tafsir-i-Kalam-i-Rab-Ul-Almin (Tafsir)[4]
- Diwan-e-Sarfi[5]
- Manasik Ul Hajj, (rules and regulations of pilgrimage in Arabic)
- Risalay-i-Zikriya (importance of zikr)
- Diwan, (Ghazals and Rubayat's Collection)
- Sawati-Ul-Ilham
- Kunz Al Jawahir[6]
- Risala e Azkar
- The five Masnavis:
- Maghaz-u-nabi
- Maslakhul Akhyar
- Makamatil Murshid
- Wamiq Azra
- Laila Majnun
Personal life
At the age of 25 he married and had a son named Muhammad Yusuf who died at early age.[7]
Death
When Shaykh Yaqub left Lahore for Kashmir and didn't go back to court again, on 08 Dhul Qadah 1003 AH/1595 A.D. Badhayuni Paid him warm tribute on his death by following chronogram: "He was the Shaykh of the nations". He was buried in Zaina Kadal Srinagar.
See also
References
- ↑ Nowshehri (RA), Khwaja Habibullah (2021-11-22). Maqamat-i-Eishan Hazrat Shaikh Yaqoob Sarfi (RA): His Stations-A travalogue. Ashraf Fazili.
- ↑ Shah, Sayid Ashraf (2021-11-25). Islam in Kashmir. Ashraf Fazili.
- ↑ Shah, Sayid Ashraf (2021-11-21). Awlya-i-Kashmir: Sufi culture of Kashmir. Ashraf Fazili.
- ↑ https://www.researchgate.net/publication/360112570_Shaikh_Yaqub_Sarfi_of_Kashmir_A_Case_Study_of_his_literary_and_political_contribution
- ↑ Divan e Sarfi - Sheikh Yaqoob Sarfi Kashmiri (Farsi).
- ↑ https://www.ijsrp.org/research-paper-0216/ijsrp-p5039.pdf
- ↑ "Hazrat Shaikh Yaqub Sarfi r.a". Aal-e-Qutub Aal-e-Syed Abdullah Shah Ghazi. 2019-04-21. Retrieved 2023-03-19.