
Millions of people — Muslims, Hindus and Christians, and celebrities and rulers — visit Moinudddin Chisti’s ‘dargah’ every year
Contrary to a defamatory recent article about the rise and spread of Sufism (especially the Chishtiya) in Chakranews this article from the GulfNews gives a far more accurate account and stresses the tolerance and fairmindedness of two of the Chishtiya’s most well known figures – Moinuddin Chishti and Nizamuddin Auliya. Many thanks to Talat Halman for pointing this article out on Facebook.
IndiaSymbols of tolerance in India’s Ajmer
Two shrines in India continue to cut through distinctions of faith and class because of the saints who once lived there
By Meher Murshed, Senior Hub Editor
Published: March 16, 2012
Image Credit: Anupa Kurian
Moinuddin Chisti passed away in Ajmer in 1230, and his prayer room, where he was buried, became a shrine
It was sometime in the 1560s, a band of wandering minstrels was exhorting Moinuddin Chishti to be their guiding star, when the great Moghul emperor Akbar heard the strains of the melodious music … he knew he had to go to Ajmer.
From then on, every year, for years to come, Akbar wound his way to Ajmer in Rajasthan to pray at the shrine of the Sufi saint and distribute alms among the poor. Whether it was to celebrate a battle or pray for a son, the emperor looked to Moinuddin Chishti. Sometimes he would undertake the journey of 300km from Agra, other times from Fatehpur.
Read more of this very interesting article via gulfnews : Symbols of tolerance in India’s Ajmer.