Shah Nimatullah Wali

Qutb, Muslim scholar
Hazrat Sayyed Nur'uddin Kermani
Title Shāh Ni'matullāh-i Walī
Died 1431 A.D (835 Hijri)
Influences Ibn ʿArabī and Abd-Allah Yafe'i

Shāh Nimatullāh or Shāh Ni'matullāh Wali (1330–1431) (Persian: شاه نعمتاللهِ ولی, Shāh Ni'matullāh-i Walī ), also spelled as Ne'matollah, Ni'matallah and Ni'mat Allah, was an Islamic scholar and a Sufi poet from the 14th and 15th centuries. Descended from the Ismaili Imam Muhammad ibn Ismail, Ni'matullah was the Qutb of a Sufi order after his master Sheikh Abd-Allah Yafae.[1] Today there is a Sufi order Nimatullahi that considers him its founder.[2]

Part of a series on Twelver Shī‘ah Islam

Alevism

Beliefs

Allah  · Islamic prophet  · Qur'an
Zahir  · Batin  · Buyruks  · Poetry
Wahdat al-wujud (Sufi metaphysics)
Shari’a · Tariqat · Haqiqa · Marifat
Baqaa · Fana · Haal · Ihsan · Kashf
Nafs · Al-Insān al-Kāmil · Four Doors
Lataif · Manzil · Nûr · Sulook · Yaqeen
Philosophy · Psychology · Cosmology
Muhammad-Ali  · Haqq-Muhammad-Ali

Practices

Fasting  · Sama  · Music
Zakat  · Ziyarat  · Taqiyya
Ashura  · Hıdırellez  · Nowruz
Mawlid  · Düşkünlük Meydanı

The Twelve Imams

Ali · Hasan · Husayn
al-Abidin · al-Baqir · al-Sadiq
al-Kadhim · ar-Rida · al-Taqi
al-Naqi · al-Askari · al-Mahdi

Crucial figures and influences

Prophet Muḥammad ibn `Abd Allāh
Khadijah bint Khuwaylid  · Fatimah
Uwais al-Qarni  · Salman al-Farisī
Jābir ibn Hayyān  · al-Misrī  · Bastamī
Al-Hallaj  · al-Kharaqanī  · Hamadānī
Abdul-Qadir Gilanī  · Ahmed Yasavī
Ahmed ar-Rifa'ī  · Qutb ad-Dīn Haydar
Ibn ʿArabī  · Hajji Bektash  · al-Qunāwī
Sheikh Taj al-Dīn Gilanī  · Sarı Saltuk
Yunus Emre  · Safī ad-Dīn Ardabilī
Sheikh Sadr al-Dīn Mūsā  · Nāimī
Shāh Ni'matullāh (Nûr'ūd-Dīn Kermānī)
Nasīmī  · Otman Baba  · Sheikh Junāyd
Sheikh Haydar  · Sultan Ali Safavī
Balım Sultan  · Khatā'ī  · Gül Baba
Pir Sultan Abdal  · Fuzûlî  · Kul Nesîmî

Leadership

Dedes · Murshid · Pir · Rehber
Babas · Dergah · Jem · Cemevi

Influential groups and tariqah

Khurramites · Kızılbaş · Babaī · Çepni
Malāmatī · Qalāndārī · Qadirī · Rifa'ī
Akbarī · Zahedī · Safāvī · Nizārī Ismā'īlī
Ni'matullāhī · Ḥurūfī · Ismā'īlī · Nūqtāvī
Bektashī · Alians · Alawi · Alavi Bohra
Jelalī · Harabatī · Nurbakshī · Galibī

Safavid Influences in Persia

Safavid Conversion of Iran from
Sunnism to Shiism

Shia in Persia before Safavids
Shiism in Persia after Safavids

Contents

Biography

Born in Aleppo, Syria, Ni’mattullah traced his own descent from the seventh Ismaili Imam, Muhammad ibn Ismail in both a poetic work as well as an epistle reproduced by his biographers ‘Abd al-Razzāq Kirmānī and ‘Abd al-‘Azīz Wā’iẓ.[3] Ni'matullah travelled widely through the Muslim world, learning the philosophies of many masters, but not at first finding a personal teacher he could dedicate himself to. During this time, Ni'matullah also studied the writings of the great Sufi philosopher and mystic Ibn ʿArabī.

Ni'matullah met Abdollah Yafe'i in Mecca and subsequently became his disciple. He studied intensely with his teacher for seven years until, spiritually transformed, he was sent out for a second round of travels, this time as a realized teacher.

Ni'matullah temporarily resided near Samarkand, along the great Central Asian Silk Road. It was here that he met the conqueror Tamerlane, but to avoid conflict with the worldly ruler, he soon left and eventually settled in the Persian region of Kerman. His shrine is in nearby Mahan.

By the time Ni'matullah died, his fame had spread throughout Persia and India, and it is said he initiated hundreds of thousands of followers in the path now known by his name.

Ni'matullah's son Shah Khalilullah was the next qutb (master) of the Nimatullahi order. On the invitation of Sultan Ahmed Shah Al Wali Bahamani Of Bidar Sultanate Deccan to Shah Nimatullah Wali, he replied "I am 104 yrs old, I can not come, I am sending my son Shah Khalilullah " to Deccan (around 1430 A.D). The silsilah (spiritual lineage) then moved to Ashtoor outside Bidar in the Deccan. Before Shah his brother Shah Nasrullah came to Bidar and was later married to Sultan's daughter. The place where Sultan received Shah is now Khalilabad outside Bidar. The Sultan saw Shah in his dream and wished that the saint come to Bidar. This dream according to many history books was realized, as when he received Shah he told his counsels, "If this is the same person I saw in my dream he should be carrying an octagon -shaped head cap”, and hence he was satisfied when Shah Khalilullah presented him with the cap. Today, even the Tomb of Shah is octagonal.

The Tomb of Shah Khalilullah

Shah Khalilullah's tomb is located outside Bidar fort and known as "chokundi". Today it is under the Archeological Survey of India. Shah Khalilullah was succeeded by numerous other qutbs (masters) including Shah Mir Mahmud Deccani, Shams al Din Deccani and Reza Ali Shah Deccani. In Hyderabad, Deccan there are tombs of 12 qutbs of the Nimatullah order [1] order in Hind (India). The silsilah moved back to Iran after the Sufi master Reza Ali Shah Deccani’s ordered his disciple Ali Shah Deccani in the year 1194 AH, nearing the end of Karim Khan Zand’s dynasty to depart to Iran with his family and entered Shiraz. Not long after the establishment of the Safawid Shi’i state, the Ni’matullahi order publicly declared itself as Shi’i.[4]

One line of succession from Hazrat Shah Khalilullah returns to Iran and is linked with several current schools, such as the Oveyssiyeh,[5] Moonesiyeh and Kowseriyeh maktabs.

Poetry

Shah N'imatullah Wali has a left a Persian Language Diwan (poetry).This contained predictions about the events which would occur on-wards in the world. His diwan indicates that his father’s name was Harun Rashid who lived in Bhara Kahu Diwan of Hazrat Shah Ni'matollah Wali

Notes

  1. ^ Virani, Shafique N. The Ismailis in the Middle Ages: A History of Survival, A Search for Salvation (New York: Oxford University Press), 2007, p. 113.
  2. ^ Liyajat Nathani Takim. Shi'ism in America. (New York: New York University Press, 2009) p. 43
  3. ^ Virani, Shafique N. The Ismailis in the Middle Ages: A History of Survival, A Search for Salvation (New York: Oxford University Press), 2007, p. 241.
  4. ^ Virani, Shafique N. The Ismailis in the Middle Ages: A History of Survival, A Search for Salvation (New York: Oxford University Press), 2007, p. 113.
  5. ^ http://www.mtoshahmaghsoudi.org/website/PDF/sufismGeneology.pdf

Bibliography

External links