About BABA BULLHAY SHAH

 Syed Abdullah Shah Qadri[1] (Punjabi/Urdu: سید عبداللہ شاہ قادری‎‎) (Shahmukhi); 1680–1757) broadly known as Bulleh Shah (بلھے شاہ‎), was a Mughal-time Punjabi Islamic thinker and Sufi writer. His first profound instructor was Shah Inayat Qadiri, a Sufi tutor of Lahore. He was a Sayyid/Syed, a relative of the Prophet Muhammad. 


Early life 


He was brought into the world in 1680 in the city of Uch, during the Mughal Empire (present day Pakistan). After his initial training, he went to Lahore where he met Inayat Arian, and turned into his understudy. 


Later years and demise 


He passed on in 1757, at 77 years old. He was covered in Kasur, and a hallowed place was worked over his grave. His memorial service supplication was driven by Qazi Hafiz Syed Zahid Hamdani an incredible strict character of Kasur.[2] 


Hallowed place 


He was covered in Kasur when he kicked the bucket in 1757. There is a spotless and exceptionally gigantic veranda which prompts the Tomb of Baba Bulleh Shah as you enter the sanctum. The roof of sanctuary is designed with the sections of Bulleh Shah in exquisite calligraphy. 


Verse 


Among Urdu writers, Bulleh Shah lived 400 miles from Mir Taqi Mir (1723–1810) of Agra.[source?] Bulleh Shah rehearsed the Sufi practice of Punjabi verse .[source?] 


The section structure Bulleh Shah which is essentially involved is the Kafi, well known in Western Punjabi and Sindhi poetry.[source?] Many individuals have put his Kafis to music, from humble road artists to prestigious Sufi artists like Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Pathanay Khan, Abida Parveen, the Waddali Brothers and Sain Zahoor, from the blended techno qawwali remixes of UK-based Asian specialists to the Pakistani musical crew Junoon.[source?]

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