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Sheikh Abdul Qadir Jilani «2026»

The sun beat down mercilessly on the dusty roads of Baghdad, but inside the madrasa, the air was thick with a different kind of heat—the fervor of knowledge.

The bandit laughed, thinking the boy was joking, and moved on. A second bandit asked the same question and received the same honest answer. Perplexed, they brought him before their .

The Sheikh helped him up. "Then your lesson has already begun. The first step of knowledge is to admit you do not know." sheikh abdul qadir jilani

“Do not accompany a believer who has no knowledge, nor a scholar who has no spiritual wayfaring. For the ignorant believer misleads you, and the godless scholar makes you doubt.”

was not just a saint of his time. He is a living companion for anyone, anywhere, who truly seeks the Face of God. The sun beat down mercilessly on the dusty

Why does he still matter? Because in an age of noise, distraction, and spiritual fragmentation, he offers something rare: a path of discipline, love, and accountability that does not abandon the outer law for inner experience, nor the inner for the outer. He is neither a fire-breathing puritan nor a world-renouncing ascetic. He is a (one who submits) and a muhsin (one who does beautiful good)—a perfect balance of justice and grace.

At the age of 50, Sheikh Abdul Qadir emerged from seclusion and began delivering public sermons in Baghdad. His fame exploded overnight. His Friday lectures at the Madrasa al-Qadiriyya drew crowds of thousands—Muslims, Jews, Christians, and skeptics alike. Perplexed, they brought him before their

While his caravan was crossing the desert, it was intercepted by a band of fierce . The robbers ransacked the travelers, taking everything of value. One bandit approached the young Abdul Qadir and mockingly asked, "Do you have anything on you, boy?"

Sheikh Abdul Qadir Jilani died in 1166 CE at the age of 91. His tomb in Baghdad remains a place of pilgrimage, visited by thousands annually—though his order’s lodges have been destroyed and rebuilt multiple times through war and upheaval.

The Sheikh took the silk cloak and wrapped it around the boy’s shoulders. "Now," the Sheikh said to the boy, "you have eaten, and you are warm. Go home."

One afternoon, a man known for his skepticism and sharp tongue entered the gathering. He looked at the Sheikh, who was dressed in simple wool, and sneered.