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Panj peer
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Panj peer (or panj pīr), meaning the five saints in Persian, were Islamic saints who overlapped in late 12th and early 13th centuries in northwestern India. There was also a similar tradition in Rajasthan, known as Panch Pir, whose quintet were subsequently Rajputized.[1]
Sufis
[edit]The Islamic panj pirs were:
| No. | Name | Portrait | Lifespan | Region | Reference(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Mu'in al-Din Chishti | 1143 – 1236 | Ajmer, Rajasthan | [2][3][note 1] | |
| 2. | Qutb al-Din Bakhtiyar Kaki | 1173 – 1235 | Mehrauli, Delhi | [3] | |
| 3. | Farid al-Din Ganjshakar | 1179 – 1266 | Pakpattan, Punjab | [3] | |
| 4. | Baha al-Din Zakariya | 1182 – 1268 | Multan, Punjab | [3] | |
| 5. | Lal Shahbaz Qalandar | 1177 – 1274 | Sehwan, Sindh | [4] |
The above Sufi saints are mentioned (alongside Nizam al-Din Awliya) in the great love-epic of the Sufi poet sayyid Waris Shah, Heer Ranjha, which opens with an invocation to them.
Rajasthan
[edit]The concept of panch pir in Rajasthan likely derived from the earlier concept of punch pir in Punjab and other parts of northwestern India.[1] Which figures were included in the panch pir quintet varied by region, however Goga was usually always included amongst the five.[1] In Rajasthan, there panch pir were:[1]
| No. | Name | Portrait |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | Gogaji | |
| 2. | Pabuji | |
| 3. | Ramdevji | |
| 4. | Harabhuji | |
| 5. | Mallinathji[note 2] | |
| Sometimes included: | ||
| Meha Mangali (Mehoji) | ||
These five (or six) figures were folk-deities.[1] Some of these figures were not originally perceived as Rajput heroes and became Rajputized later-on after the 18th century.[1] Originally, figures such as Gogaji, Pabuji, Ramdetji, and Harabhuji were originally associated with the downtrodden sections of society, particularly peasants and pastoralists, but they became appropriated as Rajput figures and their identities were usurped by the ruling-classes.[1]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h Shekha, Chander (2022). "A historical and legendary profile of Gogaji, a popular folk deity of medieval Rajasthan" (PDF). International Journal of Applied Research. 8 (12): 141–145.
- ^ Sudarshana Srinivasan (22 August 2015). "An afternoon with the saints". The Hindu (newspaper). Retrieved 3 December 2021.
- ^ a b c d "Sufis and the Spread of Islam". Story of Pakistan website. 28 April 2012. Archived from the original on 6 August 2014. Retrieved 3 December 2021.
- ^ Masood Lohar (5 October 2004). "Saint revered by people of all religions". Dawn (newspaper). Retrieved 4 December 2021.
Panj peer
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Historical Origins
Etymology and Core Concept
The term "Panj Peer," also rendered as "Panj Pir," originates from Persian, with "panj" signifying "five" and "pir" referring to a saint or spiritual elder in Sufi tradition.[1] This designation was adopted by Indian Muslims to denote a quintet of revered Sufi figures, drawing analogy to the Iranian concept of "Panj-Tan," the five holy personages in Shia veneration.[1] In the context of South Asian Persianate Islam, it emphasizes collective sanctity over individual preeminence, highlighting the saints' shared spiritual potency.[5] At its core, Panj Peer embodies the notion of five contemporaneous Chishti Sufi saints whose lifetimes intersected amid the Ghurid incursions into India around 1192 and the consolidation of the Delhi Sultanate by 1206, spanning active influence until approximately 1325. These figures—Moinuddin Chishti, Qutbuddin Bakhtiar Kaki, Fariduddin Ganjshakar, Nizamuddin Auliya, and Nasiruddin Chirag Dehlavi—formed an informal spiritual lineage through mutual discipleship and regional proximity in northwestern India, without a centralized institutional framework.[1] Their overlapping eras facilitated interpersonal exchanges that reinforced Chishti teachings of devotion, humility, and inner purification, establishing a symbolic chain pivotal to the order's early dissemination in the subcontinent. This concept underscores causal interconnections in Sufi transmission, where temporal coexistence enabled direct transmission of esoteric knowledge, distinct from later formalized silsilas.[6]Emergence in Medieval India
The emergence of the Panj Peer tradition in medieval India coincided with the Ghurid conquest of northern India, culminating in Muhammad of Ghor's victory over Prithviraj Chauhan at the Second Battle of Tarain in 1192, which dismantled key Rajput strongholds and paved the way for Muslim political dominance.[7] [8] This military expansion from Central Asia facilitated the migration of Persianate Sufis, who accompanied or followed the invading forces into the northwestern regions, including Punjab, Rajasthan, and the Indo-Gangetic plains.[9] Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti's arrival in Ajmer around 1192 exemplified this influx, as he established a khanqah shortly after the Chauhan defeat, securing the Chishti order's initial foothold amid the resulting instability.[10] [11] His settlement capitalized on the power vacuum left by the conquest, drawing local adherents through charitable and spiritual activities without direct reliance on military backing.[10] Subsequent Chishti disciples, such as Qutbuddin Bakhtiar Kaki in Delhi by the early 13th century, extended this presence northward, overlapping lifetimes that formed the basis for venerating the Panj Peer as a collective spiritual authority in northwestern India.[1] These early establishments during the Delhi Sultanate's formative years (1206 onward) enabled the tradition's consolidation, as Sufis navigated the transition from invasion to governance by leveraging personal charisma and networks over institutional power.[7]The Five Saints
Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti
![Depiction of Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti][float-right]Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti, also known as Sultan-ul-Hind, was born circa 1142 CE in Sijistan (modern-day Sistan, Iran), a region in eastern Persia.[12] As a young man, he inherited family orchards following his father's death and pursued spiritual training under mentors in the Chishti silsila, including Usman Harooni, before embarking on extensive travels across the Islamic world.[13] These journeys, spanning Baghdad, Mecca, and Bukhara, exposed him to diverse Sufi traditions and solidified his commitment to asceticism and inner purification.[14] Arriving in the Indian subcontinent around 1190–1192 CE, Chishti first settled briefly in Lahore before relocating to Ajmer in Rajasthan, where he founded the Indian branch of the Chishti order.[15] In Ajmer, he established a khanqah that served as a center for teaching Sufi principles, emphasizing service to the poor (gharib nawaz) and renunciation of worldly attachments through practices like sama (spiritual listening) and devotion to the divine via love and humility.[16] Empirical records indicate his presence coincided with the consolidation of Muslim rule in northern India following Muhammad of Ghor's campaigns, though direct causal influence on local Hindu rulers like Prithviraj Chauhan remains unsubstantiated beyond later hagiographic narratives.[11] Chishti's verifiable legacy in Rajasthan centers on his role in adapting Chishti Sufism to the local context, attracting disciples through personal austerity and charitable acts rather than political engagement. Traditional biographies abound with unverified miracle tales, such as instantaneous conversions or supernatural interventions, which prioritize devotional embellishment over contemporaneous evidence; historians note these likely emerged post-mortem to enhance his saintly aura.[17] He died on March 15, 1236 CE, in Ajmer at approximately age 94, marking the endpoint of his active missionary phase.[12]
