Mahmut Ustaosmanoğlu
Mahmut Ustaosmanoğlu, usually referred to as Mahmut Efendi and known to his disciples as Efendi Hazretleri, is a Turkish Sufi Sheikh and the leader of the influential İsmailağa jamia of the Naqshbandi-Khalidiyya Ṭarīqah centred in Çarşamba, Istanbul.
Early life
Ustaosmanoğlu was born to a village imam in Miço village of the Of district. He became a hafiz under his father by the age of 10 and continued his madrasa education, gaining his ijazah by the age of 16. Afterwards he married his cousin and started his work as an imam.Naqshbandi order
In 1952, Ustaosmanoğlu met Ahıskalı Ali Haydar Efendi, a Naqshbandi sheikh who he became his murshid. Ali Haydar Efendi appointed him as the imam of the İsmailağa Mosque in 1954. By the year 1960, Ustaosmanoğlu's life had its greatest turn after Ali Haydar Efendi's demise and he became the leader of the path. In 1996, he retired as the imam of the İsmailağa Mosque.After 1996
Ustaosmanoğlu tried to keep a low profile in the following years, especially after the 1997 memorandum, but his relations came under public spotlight with a series of internal strife in the sect. His son-in-law Hızır Ali Muratoğlu was murdered in 1998 and in 2006, a retired imam named Bayram Ali Öztürk was murdered in the mosque and the man who stabbed him to death was lynched by the congregation.Recep Tayyip Erdoğan is known to maintain close relations with Ustaosmanoğlu and a prosecution from 2007 to 2009 including wiretapping led to Erdoğan himself. Erdoğan paid a highly publicised visit to Ustaosmanoğlu the night before the presidential election in 2014.
The Khalid’îyyah - İsmailağa Jamia - Ṭarīqah silsila
# | Name | Buried | Birth | Death | - |
17 | Khwaja Muhammad Baha'ud-Dīn Naqshband Bukharī | Qasr-e-Aarifan, Bukhara, Uzbekistan | 4 Muharram 718 AH | 3 Rabi al-Awwal 791 AH | - |
18 | Khwaja Ala'ud-Dīn Attar Bukhari, son-in-law of | Jafaaniyan, Transoxiana | Wed 20 Rajab 804 AH | - | |
19 | Khwaja Yaqub Charkhi | Gulistan, Dushanbe, Tajkistan | 762 AH | 5 Safar 851 AH | - |
20 | Khwaja Ubaidullah Ahrar | Samarkand, Uzbekistan | Ramadan 806 AH | 29 Rabi al-Awwal 895 AH | - |
21 | Khwaja Muhammad Zahid Wakhshi | Wakhsh | 14 Shawwal 852 AH | 1 Rabi al-Awwal 936 AH | - |
22 | Khwaja Dervish Muhammad, son of sister of | Asqarar, Uzbekistan | 16 Shawwal 846 AH | 19 Muharram 970 AH | - |
23 | Khwaja Muhammad Amkanaki, son of | Amkana, Bukhara, Uzbekistan | 918 AH | 22 Shaban 1008 AH | - |
24 | Khwaja Muhammad Baqī Billah Berang | Delhi, India | 5 Dhu al-Hijjah 971 or 972 AH | 25 Jumada al-Thani 1012 AH | - |
25 | Shaikh Ahmad al-Farūqī al-Sirhindī, Imām Rabbānī | Sirhind, India | 14 Shawwal 971 AH | 28 Safar 1034 AH | - |
26 | Imām Khwaja Muhammad Masum Faruqī, 3rd son of | Sirhind, India | 1007 AH | 9 Rabi al-Awwal 1099 AH | - |
27 | Khwaja Muhammad Saif ud-Dīn Faruqī, son of | Sirhind, India | 1049 AH | 19 or 26 Jumada al-awwal 1096 AH | - |
28 | Sayyid Nur Muhammad Badayuni | Delhi, India | 11 Dhu al-Qi'dah 1135AH | - | |
29 | Shaheed Mirza Mazhar Jan-e-Janaan, Shams-ud-Dīn Habībullāh | Delhi, India | 11 Ramadan 1111 AH | 10 Muharram 1195 AH | - |
30 | Khwaja Abdullah Dehlavi, alias Shah Ghulam Ali Dehlavī | Delhi, India | 1156 AH | 22 Safar 1240 AH | - |
31 | Mawlānā Muhammad Khâlid-i Baghdâdî | Damascus, Syria | Sharazur, Sulaymaniyah, Iraq | - | |
32 | Abd Allah-i Mücâvir fi-Balad-î'l-Lâh, alias Abd Allah-e Macca-e Erzincanī | Mekke-i-Mükerreme | Mekke-i-Mükerreme ? | ? | - |
33 | Shaykh Mustafa İsmet Garibu'l-Lâh, alias Grand Sheikh Affandy | Çarşamba, Fatih-Istanbul, Turkey | Ioannina, Ottoman Empire | 1289 AH | - |
34 | Khwaja Khâlil-i Nûr-u Allah Zaghrawi | Zara, Sivas, Ottoman Empire | - | ||
35 | Khwaja Ali Rezâ al-Bazzâz Affandy | Tekke Camii, Bandırma, Balıkesir Province-Ottoman Empire | Bulgaria | 1330 AH | - |
36 | Khwaja Ali Haydâr Affandy, | Sakızağacı cemetery, Istanbul, Turkey | Akhaltsikhe, Batumi-Ottoman Empire 1288 AH | - | |
37 | Khwaja Mahmut Ustaosmanoğlu | :tr:Tavşanlı, Of|Tavşanlı - Of, Trabzon, Turkey |