"The ... Indo-Persian Thamarat al-quds , which primarily concentrates on the Chishti order, contains manifold anecdotes that portray Sufi s as warriors. The first such anecdote deals with Mahmud of Ghazna’s famous campaign against the unbelievers of Somnath in Gujarat and is similar in certain respects to the anecdote concerning Abu Ishaq al- Kazaruni with which the introduction to this book begins. The anecdote relates that Khwaja Muhammad Chishti (d. 1030) accompanied Sultan Mahmud when he conquered Somnath in Gujarat. The unbelievers were on the point of defeating the Muslims, so Khwaja Muhammad Chishti called out to one of his murids who was in Chisht (near Herat in modern- day Afghanistan), summoning him to Somnath. The murid appeared and helped defeat the unbelievers. Those who were in Chisht that day saw the murid pick up a staff of wood and proceed to strike doors, walls, and vari- ous other things with it. Those who witnessed this event wondered at the murid ’s actions. However, in the end, they learned that he was assisting in the Sultan’s conquest of Somnath. This anecdote serves to establish the power of Khwaja Muhammad Chishti and thereby the legitimacy of the Chishti order. It also symbolically links a Chishti Sufi with the coming of Islam to India, a motif that we considered earlier in this chapter. Though it is unlikely that this anecdote contains much historical fact, it does symbolically represent the significant role Sufis have played in spreading Islam throughout the Indian subcontinent. Other Sufi hagiographies such as Jami’s Nafahat al-uns portray Khwaja Muhammad in a similar fashion, saying: “He waged jihad against the unbelievers and idol worshippers.” Other anecdotes in Thamarat al-quds portray Chishti Sufi s as fearless war- riors, many of whom achieve martyrdom in battle with the unbelievers, for example, “Nizam al-Din ... girt himself with a sword, mounted a horse ... fi ercely resisted the unbelievers and sent many of them to Hell. In the end, he fell from a wound he received from one of the unbelievers.” “Shaykh ‘Aziz Allah ... went to Gujarat” ... and there he slew many of the sinful unbelievers ... he fought unceasingly and was martyred in that battle."
Chishti Order

January 1, 1970

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