Shah Saeed Ahmed Raipuri

Shah Saeed Ahmed Raipuri
شاہ سعید احمد رائپوری
Born January 1926
Gumthala, District Karnal, India
Died September 26, 2012(2012-09-26) (aged 86)
Lahore, Pakistan
Resting place

Gulzar-e-Saeedia Rahimia

Near Rahimia Institute of Quranic Sciences, Lahore
Occupation Islamic scholar, Sufi Sheikh, Author
Religion Islam
Denomination Sunni
Jurisprudence Hanafi
Main interest(s) Shah Waliullah's Philosophy
Notable work(s) Social Change
Disciple of Abdul Qadir Raipuri, Muhammad Ilyas Kandhalvi, Muhammad Zakariya Kandhalvi

Shah Saeed Ahmed Raipuri (Urdu: شاہ سعید احمد رائپوری, January 1928  26 September 2012[1][2][3]) was the spiritual heir of Khanqah-e-Rahimia Raipur, India and a contemporary authority of Shah Waliullah’s thought. He was among prominent disciples of Maulana Shah Ilyas Kandhalvi, founder of Tablighi Jamaat and Sheikh-ul-Hadith Maulana Muhammad Zakariya. Rising above practical politics,[4] on the basis of the thought of Shah Waliullah, Sheikh-ul-Hind Maulana Mahmood-ul-Hasan, Shah Abdul Qadir Raipuri, Maulana Ubaidullah Sindhi and Maulana Husain Ahmad Madani, he established JTI in 1967. Under his supervision, a journal named "Azm (عزم)" was launched in 1974 which is still being published. In 1987, he established an organization "Tanzeem Fikr-e-Waliullahi" based on the philosophical works of Shah Waliullah. He established "Shah Waliullah Media Foundation" to publish literature based on Waliullahi philosophy. He also established Rahimia Institute of Quranic Sciences, Lahore in 2001. There are currently four other campuses of Rahimia Institute of Quranic Sciences in Karachi, Sukkur, Multan and Rawalpindi.[5] Thousands of youth are associated with the institute through the organization of seminars and other events.[6]

In 1992, he was appointed the successor of his father Shah Abdul Aziz Raipuri.

Background

Shah Saeed Ahmed Raipuri was the eldest son of Shah Abdul Aziz Raipuri. He started to learn from Abdul Qadir Raipuri when he was 5 years old and spent thirty years of his life with him. During 1947 and 1948, he studied in Madrasa Mazahiral Uloom. Shah Saeed Ahmed Raipuri was the fourth Sheikh after Shah Abdul Rahim Raipuri (1853-1919), who was himself a Naqshbandi Pir born in Tigri, Ambala, India. Shah Abdul Rahim Raipuri established Khanqah-i-Aliya Rahimia in Raipur which, later on, became one of the leading centres of Deobandi learning. Like many of Abdul Rahim's successors, Shah Saeed Ahmed Raipuri replicated it in Lahore by the name of Idara Rahimia Ulum-i-Qurania in 2001.[5] The network of Nizam ul Madaris ur Rahimia is very extensive with innumerable madaris (religious schools) affiliated with it throughout Pakistan.[4][7]


Quotes

He was a Muslim Sufi, scholar and thinker, known for the reformist, revolutionary and progressive ideology. Here are some of his quotes:[8]

Political Efforts

Janasheen, Khulafah and Mujazeen (جانشین، خلفاہ اورمجازین)

  1. Maulana Mufti Abdul Khaliq Azad, Lahore, Pakistan.
  2. Maulana Mufti Saeed ur Rahman, Multan, Pakistan.
  3. Maulana Mufti Abdul Mateen Naumani, Burewala, Pakistan.
  4. Maulana Mufti Abdul Ghani Qasmi, Lahore, Pakistan.
  5. Maulana Mufti Abdul Qadeer, Chishtian, Pakistan.
  6. Maulana Mufti Muhammad Mukhtar Hassan, Nowshera, Pakistan.
  7. Maulana Muhammad Ilyas Mewati, Mewat, India.
  8. Maulana Mufti Abdul Salam, Muradabad, India.
  9. Maulana Muhammad Akhtar, Saharanpur, India.
  10. Maulana Muhammad Afzal, Saudi Arabia.
  11. Maulana Mufti Muhammad Ashraf Atif, Saudi Arabia.
  12. Maulana Sahebzada Syed Rasheed Ahmed, DI Khan, Pakistan.
  13. Syed Matloob Ali Zaidi, Rawalpindi, Pakistan.
  14. Dr. Liaquat Ali Shah, Sukkur, Pakistan.
  15. Maulana Qazi Muhammad Yousuf, Hassan Abdal, Pakistan.
  16. Maulana Dr. Taj Afsar, Islamabad, Pakistan.
  17. Maulana Muhammad Nasir Abdul Aziz, Jhang, Pakistan.
  18. Maulana Abdullah Abid Sindhi, Shikarpur, Sindh, Pakistan.
  19. Sahebzada Abdul Qadir Deenpuri, Bahawalnagar, Pakistan.
  20. Maulana Muhammad Ashraf Unar, Hyderabad, Pakistan.
  21. Haji Muhammad Bilal Baloch, Kazi Ahmed, Pakistan.
  22. Maulana Mufti Muhammad Anwar Shah, Quetta, Pakistan.
  23. Hafiz Zafar Hayat, Murree, Pakistan.
  24. Sofi Haji Muhammad Sarwar Jameel, Lahore, Pakistan.
  25. Haji Muhammad Yousuf Jawed, Arifwala, Pakistan.
  26. Haji Yaqoob Ali, Haroonabad, Pakistan.

In addition, those Mijazeen مجازین who died in the lives of Hazrat Raipuri, are given below.

  1. Maulana Manzoor Hassan (Late), Sahiwal, Pakistan.
  2. Maulana Hussain Ahmed Alvi (Late), Chishtian, Pakistan.
  3. Rao Abdul Rauf Khaa (Late), Haroonabad, Pakistan.
  4. Maulana Mufti Muhammad Tayab (Late), Saharanpur, India.

References

  1. Obituary.
  2. Obituary.
  3. "Shah Saeed Ahmed Raipuri passes away". Dunya News. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  4. 1 2 Kamran, Tahir (2006). "Evolution and Impact of 'Deobandi' Islam in the Punjab" (PDF). The Historian: A Research Journal. 3: 28–50.
  5. 1 2 Rahimia Institute of Quranic Sciences.
  6. "Seminar on thoughts of Shah Waliullah". Dawn News. 27 June 2005. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  7. Azad, Mufti Abdul Khaliq (2006). Mashaikh-i-Raipur: Khanqah-i-Aliya Rahimia Raipur aur mashaikh Raipur ka taaruf. Lahore: Dar ul Tehqiq wal Ishaat. pp. 198–199.
  8. "RIP Shah Saeed Ahmad Raipuri". Retrieved 26 September 2012.
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