Mīān Muhammad Bakhsh (Punjabi: میاں محمد بخش ) was a Sufi saint and a Punjabi/Pahari
poet of great repute. He is especially renowned as the writer of a book
of poetry called Saiful Malūk. He was born in a village called khanqa
peir-E-shah Gazi Khari Sharif, situated near Mirpur District of Azad Jammu & Kashmir).
Born 1830
Khari Sharif, Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Pakistan Died 1907
Khari Sharif, Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Pakistan Died 1907
His Lineage
He belonged to the Gujjar baradari and the Dedhar clan, he was a fourth generation descendant of Pīr-e Shāh Ghāzī Qalandar Damriyan Wali Sarkar, who was buried in Khari Sharif. Pīr-e Shāh Ghāzī's khalīfah
was Khwājah Dīn Muhammad; and his khalīfah was Mīān Shamsuddīn, who had
three sons: Mīān Bahāval Bakhsh, Mīān Muhammad Bakhsh - the subject of
this article -, and Mīān 'Alī Bakhsh. Mīān Muhammad Bakhsh's ancestors
originated in Gujrat, but had later settled in the Mirpur District of Azad Jammu & Kashmir. He was poet of Phari language (widely spoken in different parts of Kashmir.
Dispute About His Date of Birth
There
is much disagreement about his year of birth. Mahbūb 'Alī Faqīr Qādirī,
in a biography printed as an appendix to the text of Saiful Malūk
gives the date as 1246 AH (1826 AD), a date also followed by the
Shāhkār Islāmī Encyclopedia; 1830 and 1843 are suggested in other works
but are almost certainly erroneous. Mīān Muhammad Bakhsh himself states
in his magnum opus - Saiful Malūk - that he completed the work during the spring in the month of Ramadan, 1279 AH (1863 AD), and that he was then thirty-three years of age- hence he must have been born in 1830.
His Upbringing
He
was brought up in a very religious environment, and received his early
education at home. He was later sent with his elder brother, Mīān
Bahāval, to the nearby village of Samwal Sharīf to study religious
sciences, especially the science of Hadith in the madrassah of Hāfiz Muhammad 'Alī. Hāfiz Muhammad 'Alī had a brother, Hāfiz Nāsir, who was a majzub,
and had renounced worldly matters; this dervish resided at that time in
the mosque at Samwal Sharīf. From childhood Mīān Muhammad had exhibited
a penchant for poetry, and was especially fond of reading Yūsuf ō Zulaikhā by Nur ad-Din Abd ar-Rahman Jami.
During his time at the madrassah, Hāfiz Nāsir would often beg him to
sing some lines from Jami's poetry, and upon hearing it so expertly
rendered would invariably fall into a state of spiritual intoxication.
Mīān
Muhammad was still only fifteen years old when his father, falling
seriously ill, and realizing that he was on his deathbed, called all his
students and local notaries to see him. Mīān Shamsuddīn told his
visitors that it was his duty to pass on the spiritual lineage that he
had received through his family from Pīr-e Shāh Ghāzī
Qalandar Damriyan Wali Sarkar; he pointed to his own son, Mīān
Muhammad, and told those assembled that he could find nobody more
suitable than he to whom he might award this privilege. Everybody
agreed, the young man's reputation had already spread far and wide. Mīān
Muhammad, however, spoke up and disagreed, saying that he could not
bear to stand by and allow his elder brother Bahāvul to be deprived of
the honour. The old man was filled with so much love for his son that he
stood up and leaving his bed grasped his son by the arms; he led him to
one corner and made him face the approximate direction of Baghdad, and then he addressed the founder of their Sufi Order, Shaikh 'Abdul-Qādir Jīlānī,
presenting his son to him as his spiritual successor. Shortly after
this incident his father died. Mīān Muhammad continued to reside in his
family home for a further four years, then at the age of nineteen he
moved into the khānqāh,
where he remained for the rest of his life. Both his brothers combined
both religion and worldly affairs in their lives, but he was only
interested in spirituality, and never married - unlike them.
His Formal Pledge of Allegiance
Despite the fact that he had essentially been made a khalīfah of his father, he realized that he still needed to make a formal pledge of allegiance or bay'ah
to a Sufi master. Having completed his formal education he began to
travel, seeking out deserted locations where he would busy himself in
prayer and spiritual practices, shunning the company of his fellow-men.
He took the Sufi pledge of allegiance or bay'ah
with Hazrat Ghulām Muhammad, who was the khalīfah of Bābā Badūh Shāh
Abdāl, the khalīfah of Hājī Bagāsher (of Darkālī Mamuri Sharīf, near
Kallar Syedan District Rawalpindi), the khalīfah again of Pīr-e Shāh Ghāzī Qalandar Dumriyan Wali Sarkar.He is also said to have travelled for a while to Srinagar, where he benefitted greatly from Shaikh Ahmad Valī.
His Poetic Talents and Works
Once he had advanced a little along the Sufi way he became more and more interested in composing poetry, and one of the first things he penned was a qasidah (quatrain) in praise of his spiritual guide. Initially he preferred to write siharfis and duhras, but then he advanced to composing stories in verse. His poetry is essentially written in the Pothohari dialect of Panjabi, and utilizes a rich vocabulary of Persian and Arabic words.
His works include: Siharfi, Sohni Meheinval, Tuhfah-e Miran, Tuhfah-e- Rasuliyah, Shireen Farhad, Mirza Sahiban,
Sakhi Khavass Khan, Shah Mansur, Gulzar-e Faqir, Hidayatul
Muslimin,Panj Ganj, Masnavi-e Nīrang-e ‘Ishq. He also wrote a commentary
on the Arabic Qasidat-ul-Burda of al-Busiri and his most famous work, entitled Safarul ‘Ishq (Journey of Love), but better known as Saiful Maluk.
His Death
He died on the 7th of the Islamic month of Dhu al-Hijjah 1324 AH (1907 AD), and was buried in Khari Sharif, not far from his illustrious great great grandfather Pier-e-Shah Ghazi Qalandar Damriyan Wali Sarkar. To this day many people visit his tomb with the intention of receiving spiritual blessings.
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