Jan Muhammad of Jalna

Jan Muhammad of Jalna (or Sayyid Jan Muhammad Sufi, Jan Muhammad Darwesh) was a Sufi saint in the city of Jalna (in modern Maharashtra state).

In 1679 the Maratha leader Shivaji ransacked Jalna for three days, and being aware that Shivaji generally left alone sites of any religion, many of the wealthy of the town took refuge in the sa in the suburbs of the city.[1] However, on this occasion Shivaji looted the hermitage despite past precedent.[2] When Shivaji died in 1680, only five months after his coronation, Muslims attributed his death to a curse from Jan Muhammad for having threatened the Sufi for giving shelter to the townsfolk and their wealth.[3] Hindus in the Mughal Empire may have believed the same, as can be seen from Bhimsen Burhanpuri Saxena's Nuskha-i-Dilkusha (AKA Tarikh-e-Dilkusha) .

References

  1. S. S. Shashi (1996). Encyclopaedia Indica: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh. Anmol Publications. ISBN 978-81-7041-859-7. Retrieved 24 October 2012.
  2. Maharashtra (India). Gazetteers Dept (1977). Maharashtra State gazetteers. Director of Govt. Printing, Stationery and Publications, Maharashtra State. Retrieved 24 October 2012.
  3. Mohammad Akram Lari Azad (1990). Religion and politics in India during the seventeenth century. Criterion Publications. Retrieved 24 October 2012.


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