Chishti Order
The Chishtī Order is a Sunni Sufi order within the mystic Sufi tradition of Islam. It began in Chisht, a small town near Herat, Afghanistan, about 930 CE. The Chishti Order is known for its emphasis on love, tolerance, and openness. Chishti Sharif is name of village in Afghanistan near Iran border.
The Chishti Order is primarily followed in Afghanistan and the Indian subcontinent, Pakistan and Bangladesh. It was the first of the four main Sufi orders to be established in this region. Khwaja Muinuddin Chishti introduced the Chishti Order in Ajmer sometime in the middle of the 12th century. He was eighth in the line of succession from the founder of the Chishti Order, Abu Ishaq Shami. There are now several branches of the order, which has been the most prominent South Asian Sufi brotherhood since the 12th century.
In the last century, the order has spread outside Afghanistan and the Indian subcontinent. Chishti teachers have established centers in the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, and Eastern and Southern Africa.
Guiding principles
The Chishti shaykhs have also stressed the importance of keeping a distance from worldly power. A ruler could be a patron or a disciple, but he or she was always to be treated as just another devotee. A Chishti teacher should not attend the court or be involved in matters of state, as this will corrupt the soul with worldly matters. In his last discourse to his disciples, Khawaja Moinuddin Chishti said:Chishti practice is also notable for Sama: evoking the divine presence by listening to and losing oneself in a form of music and poetry, most usually Qawwali. The Chishti, as well as some other Sufi orders, believe that Sama can help devotees forget self in the love of Allah. However, the order also insists that followers observe the full range of Muslim obligations; it does not dismiss them as mere legalism, as some strands of Sufism have done.
However some Qadiris point out that the Chisti Order and Moinuddin Chishti never permitted musical instruments, and cite a Chishti, Muhammad Ibn Mubarak Kirmani, the Mureed of Khwaja Fareed al-Deen Ganj-e-Shakar, who wrote in his Siyar al-Awliya that Nizamuddin Auliya said the following:
Furthermore, Nizamuddin Auliya said:
Practices
The Chishtis follow five basic devotional practices.- Reciting the names of Allāh loudly, sitting in the prescribed posture at prescribed times
- Reciting the names of Allāh silently
- Regulating the breath
- Absorption in mystic contemplation
- Forty days or more days of spiritual confinement in a lonely corner or cell for prayer and contemplation
Literature
Early Chishti shaykhs adopted concepts and doctrines outlined in two influential Sufi texts: the ʿAwārif al-Maʿārif of Shaykh Shihāb al-Dīn Suhrawardī and the Kashf al-Maḥdjūb of Hudjwīrī. These texts are still read and respected today. Chishtis also read collections of the sayings, speeches, poems, and letters of the shaykhs. These collections, called malfūẓāt, were prepared by the shaykh's disciples.Spiritual lineage
Sufi orders trace their origins ultimately to the Islamic prophet Muhammad, who is believed to have instructed his successor in mystical teachings and practices in addition to the Qur'an or hidden within the Qur'an. Opinions differ as to this successor. Almost all Sufi orders trace their origins to 'Alī ibn Abī Ṭālib, Muhammad's cousin, whom the Shi'a regard as the first imam. The Chishti, though Sunni, trace their lineage through Ali. This is not unusual for Sufi orders, which tend to stress devotion rather than legalism and sectarianism.The traditional silsila of the Chishti order is as follows:
- Muhammad
- Ali ibn Abu Talib
- Al-Ḥasan al-Baṣrī
- 'Abdul Wāḥid Bin Zaid Abul Faḍl
- Fuḍayl ibn 'Iyāḍ Bin Mas'ūd Bin Bishr al-Tamīmī
- Ibrāhīm bin Adham
- Ḥudhayfa al-Marʿashī Basra Iraq
- Abū Hubayra al-Baṣrī Basra Iraq
- Khwaja Mumshad Uluw Al Dīnawarī
- Abu Ishaq Shamī
- Abu Aḥmad Abdal Chishti
- Abu Muḥammad Chishti
- Abu Yusuf Nasar-ud-Din Chishtī
- Qutab-ud-Din Maudood Chishtī
- Haji Sharif Zindani
- Usman Harooni
- Mu'īnuddīn Chishtī
- Qutab-ud-Din Bakhtyar Kaki
- Farīduddīn Mas'ūd
- Chishtī Sabri, who follow Alauddin Sabir Kaliyari
- Chishtī Nizami who follow Nizāmuddīn Auliyā.
History
- Era of the great shaykhs
- Era of the provincial khānaḳāhs
- Rise of the Ṣābiriyya branch
- Revival of the Niẓāmiyya branch
The founder of the Chishti Order in South Asia was Moinuddin Chishti. He was born in the province of Silistan in eastern Persia around 536 AH into a sayyid family claiming descent from Muhammad. When he was only nine, he memorized the Qur'an, thus becoming a hafiz. His father died when he was a teenager; Moinuddin inherited the family grinding mill and orchard. He sold everything and gave the proceeds to the poor. He traveled to Balkh and Samarkand, where he studied the Qur'an, hadith, and fiqh. He looked for something beyond scholarship and law and studied under the Chishti shaykh Usman Harooni. He moved to Lahore and then to Ajmer, where he died. His tomb, in Ajmer, is the Dargah Sharif, a popular shrine and pilgrimage site.
Moinuddin was followed by Qutab-ud-Din Bakhtyar Kaki and Farīduddīn Mas'ūd 'Baba Farid'. After Fariduddin, the Chishti Order of South Asia split into two branches. Each branch was named after one of Fariduddin's successors:
- Nizamuddin Auliya - This branch became the Chishti Nizami branch.
- Alauddin Sabir Kaliyari - This branch became the Chishti-Sabiri branch.
As a result of this merging of the Chishti order with other branches, most Sufi masters now initiate their disciples in all the four major orders of South Asia: Chishti, Suhrawadi, Qadri, and Naqshbandi. They do however, teach devotional practices typical of the order with which they are primarily associated.
The Chishti order has also absorbed influences and merged at times with various antinomian fakir Sufi groups, especially the Qalandar. Some Chishtis both past and present have lived as renunciants or as wandering dervish.
In more recent times, a more contemporary expression of traditional Chishti Sufi practices can be found in the establishment of the Ishq-Nuri Tariqa in the 1960s, as a branch of the Chishti-Nizami silsila.
In addition, a number of mixed-Sufi type groups or movements in Islam, have also been influenced by the Chishti Order proper. The best known and most widespread example is of the Jamaat Ahle Sunnat, a Sunni Muslim sect with a huge international following, which is in essence not a proper Sufi organization though adopting many Sufi customs and traditions.
Mughal rulers
Several rulers of the Mughal dynasty of South Asia were Chisti devotees. The emperor Akbar was perhaps the most fervent of them. It is said to be by the blessing of Shaikh Salim Chishti that Akbar's first surviving child, the future Jahangir, was born. The child was named Salim after the sheikh and was affectionately addressed by Akbar as Sheikhu Baba.Akbar also credited the Chisti sheikhs with his victory at the Siege of Chittorgarh. Akbar had vowed to visit the Chisti dargah, the tomb of Moinuddin Chishti, at Ajmer if he were victorious. He fulfilled his vow by visiting the dargah with his musicians, who played in honor of the sheikh.
Shah Jahan's daughter, Jahanara Begum Sahib, was also a devout follower of the Chisti Order.
Other notable Chishti shaykhs
- Qutb ud deen Modood Chishti 527 A.H
- Haji Shareef zandani 612 A.H
- Usman Harooni 617 A.H
- Qut ul aqtab Qutb ud deen Bakhtiyar kaki 635 A.H
- Fareed ud deen Mas’ood Ganj E Shakar 668 A.H
- Naseer ud deen Mahmood Charagh Dehlavi 757 A.H
- Syed jalaluddin husain naqvi al Bukhari famous as Makhdoom jahanian jahangasht, uch sharif Tajuddin Chishti
- Amir Khusro
- Akhi Siraj Aainae Hind
- Alaul Haq Pandavi
- Ashraf Jahangir Semnani
- Burhanuddin Gharib
- Bande Nawaz
- Salim Chishti
- Noor Muhammad Maharvi1205 A.H
- Muhammad Suleman Taunsvi 1267 A.H
- Ata Hussain Fani Chishti
- Khwaja Ghulam Farid
- Muhammad Shamsuddin Sialvi 1300 A.H
- Ahamed Mohiyudheen Noorishah Jeelani
- Meher Ali Shah
- Inayat Khan
- Fariduddin Tavaela Bukhsh
- Haji Imdadullah Muhajir Makki
- Sheikh Maulana Badruddin Chishti Hussaini Rh 1340 A.H
- Astana Chishtiya Multani Baba, Gangwar Shareef
- Syed Sharfuddin Shah Wilayat Naqvi