Skip to content
Category

Sufi mystics

page 2
Sayyid Mir Jan
Sufi saint
Shah Syed Muhammad Nurbakhsh Qahistani
Iranian Sufi
Hazrat Shah Makhdum
Sufi
Akhi Siraj Aainae Hind
Sufi saint
Ibn Karram
founder of the Karramiyya sect
Saʿd al-Dīn al-Ḥamuwayī
Persian Ṣūfī
Sufi Muhammad Barkat Ali
Sufi saint (1911–1997)
Khwajagan
Khwājagān (shortened/singular forms: Khwaja, Khaja(h), Khawaja or khuwaja) is a Persian title for "the Masters". Khwajagan, as the plural for "Khwāja", is often used to refer to a network of Sufis in Central Asia from the 10th to the 16th century who are often incorporated into later Naqshbandi and Khalwati hierarchies, as well as other Sufi groups, such as the Yasaviyya. In Firdowsi's Shahnama the word is used many times for some rulers and heroes of ancient Iran as well. The special zikr of the Khwajagan is called 'Khatm Khajagan'.
Syed Mohammed Mukhtar Ashraf
Indian Sufi spiritual leader (1916–1996)
Fida Hassnain
Indian historian
Mir Hamza Nigari
Azerbaijani poet and writer (1805-1885)
Khawaja Noor Muhammad Maharvi
Pakistani saint
Nur Qutb Alam
medieval Sufi saint of Bengal
Sardar Ahmad Chishti
Pakistani Sufi (1903–1962)
Syed Najmuddin Ghawsud Dahar Qalandar
sufi saint
Pir Haji Ali Shah Bukhari
Sufi saint
Mast-Allah
in India, Pakistan, and Iran, a type of religious intoxication
Muhammad ibn Abd al-Jabbar ibn al-Hasan al-Niffari
Sufi mystic
Khwaja Abdul Ghaffar Naqshbandi
Muhammad Mohsin Bekas
Sindhi Sufi Poet
Sheikh Muhammad
Indian Muslim saint (1560–1650)
Shah Daulah Shahid
bengalese Sufi Muslim figure
Sayyid Ghulam Hussain Shah Bukhari
Pakistani cleric
Shaikh Jalaluddin Tabrizi
Sufi saint
Omar Ali-Shah
Sufi teacher, writer
Nadir Ali Shah
Sufi Muslim Saint of Pakistan
Syed Mohammed Madni Ashraf
Indian Muslim scholar, cleric and mufti
Shah Inayat Shaheed
17th-century Sindhi revolutionary
Dawūd al-Qayṣarī
Sufi scholar, philosopher and mystic