Hazrat Lal Shahbaz Qalandar

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 2

Hazrat Lal Shahbaz Qalandar ( ‫) قلندرؓ شہباز لعل حضرت‬

Hazrat Lal Shahbaz Qalandar

ؓ‫حضرتؓلعلؓشہبازؓقلندر‬

Hazrat Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, a patron saint of Sindhis, was born early in the twelfth century
in 1177 in Marwand, now Afghanistan, to a noble Makhdum, sayed Ahmed Kabir, who was a
close friend of the King of Tabriz. Lal Shahbaz Qalandar?s real name was Syed Muhammad
Usman and his mother was a high-ranking princess. He showed from his infancy signs of a
deep spiritual nature. It is said that even when very young he had developed occult powers.
He knew Quran by heart at age seven, and at twenty he was initiated into the Qalandar order.
The call of the Spirit came to this man who was destined to be the mystic light, the light of
Sufism to India and especially to Sind. He had three other friends: Baba Farid Shakar Ganj of
Pakpattan [1174-1266]; Jalaluddin Bukhari of Uch- Bahawalpur [1196-1294] and Bahauddin
Zakaria of Multan [1170-1267]. They are known to the Sufis as the four great friends, the
great pioneers of 13th century Sufi movement. Lal Shahbaz Qalandar and his friends
conceived the idea of coming over to India.
The King of Baghdad, who loved and revered Lal Shahbaz Qalandar, entreated him not to
leave Baghdad; but he, who felt the urge from within, could not see his way to remain, and
soon after led his three companions on the holy mission that was to spreads Islam in India.
Many are the stories given about their adventurous journey: tradition is resonant with the
voice of miracles. It is said that when the party arrived at the Persian Gulf and after they had
reached one particular island they could not find a soul. They had to cross to some other place
to secure a boat. Lal Shahbaz Qalandar said to his companions: "Depend upon God and enter
the stream; but take care, you must have no attachment to the things of the world, otherwise
the waters cannot give you a safe passage. Here is my bowl, lay your hands on it and it shall
serve us as a boat." The four entered the stream. In the middle of the river the bowl began to
sink and the companions along with it. Usman said to them, "One of you has some burden of
the world on your person." Actually Bhawaldin, on of the three companions, had carried with
himself a gold brick, calculating that it might be of some use on a rainy day. Marwandi
ordered him to throw it into the river, and behold! As soon as the brick sant, the bowl came up
and the friends safely reached the other side. Lal Shahbaz Qalandar is said to have been
challenged on the way by a famous ascetic to bathe in a tub of burning oil. He successfully
passed the test. Thus he earned the title of Lal (a ruby) as the ascetic said to him, "Thou are
indeed the Lal of Lal (the ruby of rubies)". This meant that Lal Shahbaz Qalandar was real
gold having been tested by fire. He received no injury; only his robe turned crimson. It is
believed that Lal Shabaz Qalandar was so named because of the red robe he wore all his life,
and a story is told of how Lal Shahbaz Qalandar rescued his friend Sheikh Farrid Shakar Ganj
by a miracle from a baker's wife?s accusations. The friends, in 1263, arrived in Sind, which
included in those days Multan and some other portion of the Punjab, where people begged Lal
Shahbaz Qalandar to stay. His three friends went to other lands. He continued journey south,
eventually settling down in Sehwan in southern Sindh, where he took up residence in the
trunk of a tree on the outskirts of town. Sehwan is located on the right bank of the Indus about
180 miles north of Karachi. Sehwan is famous for its ancient Shiva temple and the remains of
Kafir-Qila, a fort reportedly made by Alexander. Lal Shahbaz lived and died in Sehwan. The
legend has it that the incumbent fakirs in Sewhan sent him a bowl of milk filled to the brim
indicating that the place was already full of faqirs and there was no room for one more. He
returned the bowl floating a single flower on the top suggesting by this reply that there was
ample room for him, as he would remain among them floating as a flower. His legend spread
far and wide by the time of his death in 1274. Thus a sacred flower was planted in the soil of
Sind. It is said that 17 leading tribes of Punjab accepted Islam at the hands of Baba Farid.
Some of these tribes were Kharals, Dhudhyan, Tobian and also Wattoo, a Rajput tribe.
Jalaluddin Bukhari converted the Soomros and Sammas of Sindh while Shahbaz Qalandar had
a great following in Multan and Northern Sindh. The shrine around Lal Shahbaz Qalandar
tomb, built in 1356, dazzles the eye with its Sindh kashi tiles, mirror work and two gold-
plated doors - one donated by the late Shah of Iran, the other by the late Prime Minister
Zulfikar Bhutto of Pakistan. The inner sanctum is about 100 yards square with the silver
canopied grave in the middle. His annual Urs celebrations are held on the 18 Shahban - the
eighth month of the Islamic lunar calendar. It attracts over half a million pilgrims mainly from
Sindh and Punjab who flock into Sewhan, a small town of about 30,000. On each morning of
the three-day feast, the narrow lanes of Sewhan are packed to capacity as thousands and
thousands of pilgrims, fakirs and worshippers make their way to the shrine to commune with
the saint.

You might also like