Monday 6 February 2017

Hazrat Shah-e-Alam Sirajuddin Muhammad Bukhari Sarkar

Syed Sirajuddin Muhammad, the child and successor of hazrath syed Burhanuddin Qutub e Alam, came to be called by the title of Shah e Alam, lord of the world. His dad Sheik Burhanuddin, otherwise called Qutub-e-Alam, was the grandson of the observed Syed Jalal uddin Hussaini Bukhari of Uch, otherwise called Makhdoom Jehaniya Jehan Gasht. He touched base in Gujarat amid the start of the fifteenth century amid control of Ahmed Shah I, settling on the edges of Ahmedabad. 




Taking after the Suharwardi convention, the family settled close contact with the Gujarat Sultanate and later with Mughal rulers and assumed a dynamic part in the social and political existence of the city.  Shah e Alam, the eleventh among twelve children, helped his dad, Qutub-e-Alam. A fascinating wonder happened one day; while washing in a water body, his feet hit after something. The Shaikh commented that he didn't know whether the question was stone, iron or wood. Wonderfully, the protest transformed into a blend of the three materials and turned into a revered relic.

Shah Alam was identified with the regal places of Sindh and Gujarat through marriage to Bibi Marqi, the second girl of Jam Saheb of Sindh. He burned through six days seven days in singular contemplation and got guests just on Fridays, when open examinations were held. A record of the Friday social events was ordered in a seven volume manual titled, 'Kunuz-e-Muhammadi' by Shaykh Farid container Daulat Shah Jilwani. The record is not traceable today. 

He kicked the bucket on 20 Jumada al akhira 880 Hijri/1475 AD. The tomb was worked by Taj Kham Narpali and now known as Shah-e-Alam's Roza.



History:-

Shah e Alam was the child of Hazrath Syed Burhanuddin Qutub-ul-Alam and the colossal grandson of the observed Hazrath Syed Jalal uddin Hussaini Bukhari of Uch, otherwise called Makhdoom Jahaniyan Jahangasht. Pulled in to the court of Ahmed Shah I, his dad settled at Vatva and passed on there in 1452. Shah e Alam succeeded his dad and, till his passing in 1475, was the guide of Mahmud Begada's childhood, and a while later a standout amongst the most loved of Muslim religious educators of Ahmedabad.