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Abdullah Shah Ghazi ((アラビア語:عبد الله شاه غازى)) is widely revered in Pakistan. The Mausoleum and Dargah of Abdullah Shah Ghazi (see Abdullah Shah Ghazi Mausoleum) is located in Clifton neighbourhood of Saddar Town in Karachi. ==History== There are two versions about Abdullah Shah Ghazi. The first version states that Abdullah Shah Ghazi was Syed Abu Muhammad Abdullah Al Ishtar from the lineage of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad from the linage of Hasan ibn Ali. According to historian Suhail Zaheer Lari, he was the son of Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyya.〔Lari, Suhail Zaheer. A History of Sindh. Oxford University Press, USA. 1995. (OUP Pakistan. 1996. )〕 He was born in Medina in 720 and arrived in Sindh in 760 as a merchant and brought with him a large number of horses purchased from Kufa, Iraq. He was given a warm welcome as he belonged to a saadat family, the noblest in Islam. He died in 773 near the sea while dressed in war attire. He was buried atop a hill in Karachi, where his remains remain. Up to the early 1950s the shrine was a small hut on top of a sandy hill in Clifton. The shrine was built, expanded and beautified in the mid-1960s as it had begun to attract the devotional attention. The shrine expansion and pilgrims attracted the festivities and music Qawwali. In 2005, Karachi municipal government started an extensive repair, cleaning up and renovation job on the shrine which was completed in 2007. Shah Ghazi shrine was bombed in 2010 by militant Salafis who believe that Sufism encourages ‘negative innovations’, Grave worshiping and negates the purity of Islam.〔(Abdullah Shah Ghazi: The saviour saint )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Abdullah Shah Ghazi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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