Pir Baba

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sayyid Ali Tirmizi
Pir Baba
پیر بابا
Pirbaba Mazar.jpg
Buner Mazar of Pir Baba
TitleAli Tirmizi
Other namesPir Baba
Personal
Born
Ali Tirmizi

Around 908 Hijri, 1502 A.D.
DiedAround Rajab 991 Hijri, 1583 A.D.
Resting placePacha Killay Buner District
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni
MovementEstablished Islam among Yusufzai Pashtuns
Notable work(s)Spreading Islam
Other namesPir Baba
OrderChishti Sufi Order
Muslim leader
TeacherSheikh Saalaar Roomi
Period in office900–1000 Hijjri, Mughal emperors Baber & Humayun Period
Disciple ofSalaar Roomi
Disciples

Sayyid Ali Tirmizi (Pashto: سيد علي ترمذي‎), more commonly known as Pir Baba[1] (پير بابا), was a Sufi who settled in Buner (present-day Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan) among the Yusufzai Pashtuns. He was probably born in 908 AH (1502 CE), in Fergana (present-day Uzbekistan), of Sayyid descent, died in AH 991 (1583 CE). He was a supporter of the Mughal emperor Babar, and was an opponent of Bayazid Pir Roshan.

It is claimed that Pir Baba was the son of Sayyid Qamar Ali, who was in emperor Babur's army and had come down to Delhi as the governor of the Indian state. His mother was of Uzbek origin. Baba was more inclined towards Islamic studies.[2] Baba supposedly married a sister of Daulat Khan a Yusufzai; a respected Pashtun from Buner.[3]

He had 2 sons, Sayyid Habibullāh Shaah and Sayyid Mustafa Shaah.[4] Anwar Baig Baghi, a descendant of Pir Baba in his 12th generation, made news because "he could read only up to fifth grade but he penned down over 50 books on variety of topics."[5]

Lineage[]

Sayyid Ali Tirmizi was a descendant of Prophet Muhammad through Sultan Sadaat Sayyid Ali Akbar bin Imam Hasan al-Askari, his family tree lineage:[6][7][8]

1. Prophet Muhammad

2. Ali ibn Abi Talib and Fatima Al Zahra

3. Imam Hussain

4. Imam Ali Zayn al-Abidin

5. Imam Muhammad al Baqir 

6. Imam Ja'far al-Sâdiq

7. Imam Musa al-Kazim

8. Imam Ali al Reza

9. Imam Muhammad al Taqi

10. Imam Ali al Hadi

11. Imam Hasan al-Askari

12. Sayyid Ali Akbar 

13. Sayyid Mahmud

14. Sayyid Abdulrahim

15. Sayyid Muayyid Amir Ali

16. Sayyid Jalaluddin Ganj ul Alam

17. Sayyid Nasir Khusro

18. Sayyid Husamuddin

19. Sayyid Muhammad

20. Sayyid Umar

21. Sayyid Ja’far

22. Sayyid Usman

23. Sayyid Ishaq

24. Sayyid Mahmud

25. Sayyid Hamid

26. Sayyid Ayyub Abu Turab

27. Sayyid Ahmad Mushtaq

28. Sayyid Ahmad Ali Barraq

29. Sayyid Ahmad Begim

30. Sayyid Muhammad Nur Bakhsh

31. Sayyid Yusuf Nur

32. Sayyid Ahmad Nur

33. Sayyid Qanbar Ali Shah Ferghani

34. Sayyid Ali Tirmizi Pir Baba Buner

Shrine (Mazar)[]

Baba's grave and shrine is in Pacha Killay village in the mountainous Buner District of present-day Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.[9][10]

The shrine was closed by the Taliban temporarily.[11]

Urs Mubarak[]

The annual Urs or Pilgrimage of Hazrat Pir Baba is celebrated from 24 to 26 Rajab of the Islamic calendar every year in Buner.[12][13]

References[]

  1. ^ "Pir Baba".
  2. ^ "PIR BABA" book by Sayyid Hussain Shah Tirmizi Sajjada Nashin, Pakistan, page 20-22
  3. ^ http://sayyed.info/rootspersona-tree/hazrat-sayyed-ali-tirmizi/ Hazrat Sayyed Ali Tirmizi
  4. ^ "PIR BABA" book by Sayyid Hussain Shah Tirmizi Sajjada Nashin, Pakistan, page 10-12
  5. ^ Sher Alam Shinwari (4 July 2019), "Septuagenarian writer urges youth to develop taste for reading", Dawn News. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
  6. ^ "PIR BABA" book by Sayyid Hussain Shah Tirmizi Sajjada Nashin, Pakistan, page 9
  7. ^ https://shajara.org/2020/07/05/sulton-sodot-saodat-amir-sayyid-ali-akbar/ СУЛТОН СОДОТ (САОДАТ) АМИР САЙЙИД АЛИ АКБАР ибн ИМОМ ҲАСАН АЛ—АСКАРИЙ
  8. ^ https://shajara.org/2020/06/29/1426/ Shajara-e-nasab lineages of descendants of Imam Hasan al-Askari r.a.
  9. ^ "God and Drugs in Northern Pakistan - YTPak". www.ytpak.com.
  10. ^ "Pir Baba (Mazar Shreef) Buner Swat". pk.geoview.info.
  11. ^ "Militants bomb Sufi saint's shrine". The Express Tribune. 22 June 2010. Retrieved 8 November 2016.
  12. ^ Correspondent, The Newspaper's (2017-04-24). "Pir Baba Urs concludes". DAWN.COM. Retrieved 2020-09-18.
  13. ^ "Urs of Pir Baba concludes". www.thenews.com.pk. Retrieved 2020-09-19.
Retrieved from ""