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Khawaja Shahudin

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Khawaja Pir Syed Muhammad Shahudin Gillani
Personal life
Born1867
Died1948
Resting placePakka Ghara
Children
  • Syed Mumtaz Ali shah Gillani
  • Syed Abdul Rasheed shah Gillani
  • Syed Altaf Ali shah Gillani
Era20th century
RegionRangpura (Punab: Sialkot:)
Main interest(s)Sufi poetry, Muraqaba, Dhikr
Notable work(s)Punjabi translation of Persian and Arabic poetry
Religious life
ReligionIslam
CreedHanafi, Sufis
Muslim leader
Influenced by

Khawaja Syed Shahudin Gillani (1867–1948) was a Sufi poet of Punjabi origin. He was a follower of the Sufi Order of Sarwari Qadiri and was a disciple of Syed Asghar Ali Shah of Artala Sharif, Sialkot.

Literary works

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During his lifetime, Shahudin produced three poetry books, and fifteen poetic translations of Arabic and Persian works into Punjabi.[1][2][3] Bhai used to read from the translated books of Aulia Ikram in the presence of Syed Asgar Ali.[1]

Bibliography

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Poetry

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  • Salat Ul Aarfeen[4]
  • Noha-e-Ushaaq
  • Maulood Sharif

Poetic translations

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Shahudin produced translations from the following:[1][2][3]

Personal life

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He learned Fiqh, Hadith and Tafsir at the age of thirteen.[citation needed] Once, he commented to his teacher, Munshi Rukane AAlam, that "He was the scholar who practiced the knowledge".[1]

Shahudin was five feet eight inches tall and had a thick beard.[1] He usually wore a turban, a tah band (an open cloth used to cover the body below the navel), camise, and a white cloth on his shoulder.[1]

Shortly after marriage, Shahudin settled in Gujrat and opened a grocery store. In a year or two, his father died, and he inherited loans. He joined a school as a teacher; to repay the loan, he started working in the paper mill after school. In winter, he had two sons. After six years, his younger son, Muhammad Sharif, and wife died.

His cousin, Syed Jamal ud Din, asked him to find a spiritual mentor. His cousin suggested the name of Syed Asghar Ali Shah. On the next Friday, both went to Syed Asgar Ali; Syed took him.[1][2][3] He has claimed that once he was intoxicated, he found that Allah "manifested himself in his heart".[3]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Boota, Sohail (2007). Tazkara Aulia. Sialkot: Shahudin Academy.
  2. ^ a b c Maula, Bukhash (1988). Punjabi Shairan day Tazkray. Lahore: Aziz Publishers.
  3. ^ a b c d Ali, Mumtaz (1982). Hazeena Tul Uns. Sialkot: Zam Zama.
  4. ^ Shahudin, Maulavi. Salat Ul Aarfeen. Kashmiri Bazaar Lahore: Malik Chananuddin.
  5. ^ Shahudain, Maulavi. Diwan-e-Hafez. Kashmiri Bazaar Lahore: Malik Chananuddin.