Good thread and now it is time to introduce my dynasty head
Abdul-Qadir Gilani
Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani (
Arabic: عبد القادر الجيلاني;
Persian: عبد القادر گیلانی,
Turkish:
Abdülkâdir Geylânî,
Kurdish: Evdilqadirê Geylanî,
Urdu: عبد القادر گیلانی
Abdolqāder Gilāni[9] Al-Sayyid Muhiyudin Abu Muhammad Abdal Qadir Al-Jilani Al-Hasani Wal-Hussaini (born 29 Shabaan, 470 Hijri, in the town of Na'if, district of
Gilan, Persia,oar
Gilan Al-Mada'in,
Iraq died 8 Rabi al-Awwal 561 AH, in
Baghdad,
[10] (1077–1166 CE), was a
Persian[11] Hanbali[4][5] jurist and Sufi based in Baghdad.
Qadiriyya was his patronym.
Family
Al-Gilani was born around 1077 in
Persia.
[nb 1][12] Al-Gilani's father, Abu Salih Musa al-Hasani, was a descendant of
Hasan ibn Ali, (Imam Hasan). Hasan was the eldest son of
Ali and
Fatimah. Ali was
Muhammad's son-in-law and also cousin and Fatima was
Muhammad's daughter. Al-Gilani's mother was the daughter of Abdullah Sawmai, a descendant of
Husayn ibn Ali, the younger son of Ali and Fatima. Thus, Al-Gilani was both a Hasani and Hussaini Sayyid.
Name
Within Al-Gilani's full name,
al-Sayyid Muhiyudin Abu Muhammad Abdal Qadir al-Jilani al-Hasani wal-Hussaini, the word
Sayyid denotes his descent from Muhammad.
[13] The name
Muhiyudin describes him as a "reviver of religion".
[14] The phrase,
al-Jilani refers to Al Gilani's place of birth.
[15][16] However, Al-Gilani also carried the epithet,
al-Baghdadi.[17][18][19] referring to his residence and burial in
Baghdad. The phrase
al-Hasani wal-Hussaini affirms his lineal descent from both
Hasan ibn Ali and
Hussein ibn Ali, the grandsons of Muhammad.
[20][21] Describing Al Gilani with the phrase 'Najib al-tarafayn Sayyid' indicates that both his mother and father were of apostolic lineage.
[22]
Paternal heritage
Al Gilani's father was a
Sayyed.
[23][24] He was respected as a saint by the people of his day, and was known as "Jangi Dost", (one who loves God), thus "Jangidost" was his
sobriquet.
[25][26][27]
Education
Al Gilani spent his early life in Na'if, the town of his birth. In 1095, at the age of eighteen years, he went to
Baghdad. There, he pursued the study of
Hanbali law
[28] under Qadi Abu Sa'd al-Mubarak al-Mukharrimi and
Ibn Aqil.
[29] He was given lessons on
Hadith by Abu Muhammad Ja'far al-Sarraj.
[29] In
Tasawwuf, his spiritual instructor was Abu'l-Khair Hammad ibn Muslim al-Dabbas.
[30] (A detailed description of his various teachers and subjects are included below). After completing his education, Gilani left Baghdad. He spent twenty-five years as a reclusive wanderer in the desert regions of Iraq.
[31]
Subject Shaykh (Teacher)
Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence)
Ibn Aqil al-Hanbali
Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence) Abu Al Hasan Mohd. ibn Qazi Abu Yali
Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence) Abu Al Khatab Mahfuz Hanbali
Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence) Muhammad ibn Al Husnayn
Fiqh (Islamic Jurisprudence) Qazi Abu Saeed Mubarak ibn Ali al-Mukharrami
Tasawwuf (Sufism) Qazi Abu Saeed Mubarak ibn Ali al-Mukharrami
Abu'l-Khair Hammad ibn Muslim al-Dabbas
Abu Zakariay ibn Yahya ibn Ali Al Tabrezi
Hadith Abu Bakr ibn Muzaffar
Hadith Mohd. Ibn Al Hasan Baqalai Abu Sayeed
Mohd. ibn Abdul Kareem
Hadith Abu Al Ghanaem Mohd. Ibn Mohd Ali Ibn Maymoon Al Farsi
Hadith Abu Bakr Ahmad Ibn Al Muzaffar
Hadith Abu Jafer Ibn Ahmad Ibn Al Hussain Al Qari
Hadith Abu Al Qasim Ali Ibn Mohd. Ibn Banaan Al Karkhi
Hadith Abu Talib Abdul Qadri Ibn Mohd. Yusuf
Hadith Abdul Rahman Ibn Ahmad Abu Al Barkat Hibtaallah Ibn Al Mubarak
Hadith Abu Al Nasr Ibn Il Mukhtar
Hadith Abu Nasr Muhammad
Hadith Abu Ghalib Ahmad
Hadith Abu Abdullah Aulad Ali Al Bana
Hadith Abu Al Hasan Al Mubarak Ibn Al Teyvari
Hadith Abu Mansur Abdurahman Al Taqrar
[32]
Later life
In 1127, Al Gilani returned to Baghdad and began to preach to the public.
[12] He joined the teaching staff of the school belonging to his own teacher, al-Mukharrimii, and was popular with students. In the morning he taught
hadith and
tafsir, and in the afternoon he held discourse on the science of the heart and the virtues of the
Qur'an. He was said to have been a convincing preacher and converted numerous
Jews and
Christians. His strength came in the reconciling of the mystical nature of the
Sufi and strict nature of the Qur'an.
[12]
Death and burial
Al Gilani died in the evening of Saturday 1166 (8 Rabi' al-Awwal 561AH) at the age of eighty nine years (by the
Islamic calendar).
[10] His body was entombed in a shrine within his
madrassa in Babul-Sheikh, Resafa (East bank of the Tigris) in
Baghdad, Iraq.
[33][34][35] During the reign of the
Safavid Shah
Ismail I, Gilani's shrine was destroyed,
[36] however in 1535 the Ottoman Sultan
Suleiman had a
turba (dome) built over the shrine, which exists to this day.
[37]
Books
- Futuh al-Ghaib (Revelations of the Unseen) – 78 discourses, fairly short and to the point but very powerful.
- Al-Fath ar-Rabbani (The Sublime Revelation) – 62 discourses, definitely longer, given in the Ribaat and Madrasa in Baghdad AH 545–546.
- Jala' al-Khawatir (The Removal of Cares) – 45 discourses, also in the same locations, given in the year AH 546.
- Malfuzat (Utterances of Shaikh 'Abd al-Qadir) – This is a collection of quotes from the Shaikh. Generally, it is found at the end of the hand-copied, Arabic manuscripts of Fath ar-Rabbani.
- Al-Ghunya li-Talibi Tariq al-Haqq (Sufficient Provision for Seekers of the Path of Truth, also known in the Indian sub-continent as Al-Ghunya li-Talibin). These five volumes, written by the Shaikh at the request of one of his murids, is a comprehensive guide to all aspects of Islam, both the inward and the outward.
- Khamsata 'Ashara Maktuban (Fifteen Letters) – These are 15 letters originally written in Persian by Shaikh 'Abd al-Qadir to one of his murids.
- Al-Fuyudat al-Rabbaniyya (Emanations of Lordly Grace)
- Bashair al-Khairat (Glad Tidings of Good Things) – A Salawat by Shaykh Abd al-Qadir by way of inspiration from Allah.
- Kitab Sirr al-Asrar wa Mazhar al-Anwar[38] (The Book of the Secret of Secrets and the Manifestation of Light
May Allah give him Jannah and forgive his all sins.
Abdul-Qadir Gilani - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia