Shah Shahidullah Faridi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

BornJohn Gilbert Lennard
1915
Died1978 (aged 6263)
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni
Shah Shahidullah Faridi
Personal life
BornJohn Gilbert Lennard
1915
Died1978 (aged 6263)
Religious life
ReligionIslam
DenominationSunni
TariqaChishti (Sabiri)
Muslim leader
Disciple ofSyed Muhammad Zauqi Shah
Influenced by
Arabic name
Personal (Ism)Jān Ghilbart
جَان غِلْبَرْت
Patronymic (Nasab)Linard
لِنَرْد
Epithet (Laqab)Shahīd Allāh
شهيد الله
Toponymic (Nisba)Al-Farīdī
الْفَرِيْدِيّ
Al-Inglīzī
الإِنْجْلِيزِيّ

Shaykh Shah Shahidullah Faridi (né John Gilbert Lennard) (1915–1978) was a British Muslim convert, born to a Christian family.[1]

He embraced Islam after reading "Kashf al-Mahjub" (The Unveiling of the Veiled), the classical treatise on Sufism written by Ali ibn Uthman al-Hujwiri.[citation needed] Though having been born and raised in a wealthy English family he left his home in search of a Sufi shaikh. In India, he eventually met the Chishti Sabri shaikh, Syed Muhammad Zauqi Shah and pledged allegiance to him.[citation needed]

At forty years of age, the responsibilities of spiritual succession were entrusted to him. He lived in Karachi for about thirty years until he died on Ramadan 17th in 1978.[citation needed]

He wrote Inner Aspects of Faith. He also compiled Part Two of "Tarbiatul Ushaq" ("The Training of Divine Lovers"), Syed Mohammad Zauqi Shah, 1425/2004, pub. A.S.Nordeen, Kuala Lumpur, ISBN 983-065-185-1. A brief biography of his, published recently in Urdu called "Talash e Haqq rudad." by Ahmed Ghazali Shaheedi, printed by M. Naeem Hashmi, Saudabad Malir Colony Karachi.

Selected works

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI