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Shah Abdul Latif : ウィキペディア英語版 | Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai
Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai (also referred to by the honorifics: ''Lakhino Latif'', ''Latif Ghot'', ''Bhittai'', and ''Bhitt Jo Shah'') (1689 – 1752) ((シンド語:شاه عبداللطيف ڀٽائي), (ウルドゥー語:شاہ عبداللطیف بھٹائی)) was a noted Sindhi Sufi scholar, mystic, saint, and poet, widely considered to be greatest Muslim poet of Sindhi language.〔 His collected poems were assembled in the compilation ''Shah Jo Risalo'', which exists in numerous versions and has been translated to English, Urdu, and other languages. His work has been compared frequently to great Persian poet Rūmī. Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Professor of Islamic studies at George Washington University, described Shah Latif as a "direct emanation of Rūmī's spirituality in South Asia." == Bhittai's ancestry == According to most scholars, Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai's lineage goes back to the Hirat. He however used the term "Shah" as a surname. His elders had migrated to Sindh during the era of Timur. Shah Abdul Karim Bulri (1600s), whose mausoleum stands at Bulri, about 40 miles from Hyderabad, a mystic Sufi poet of considerable repute, was his great, great grandfather. His verses in Sindhi are existent and his anniversary is still held at Bulri, in the form of an Urs. His father, Syed Habib Shah, lived in Hala Haveli, a small village, about forty miles from Matiari and not far from the village of Bhitshah. Later he left this place and moved to Kotri, where Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai spent some part of his adolescent life.
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