من مناهج علماء شبه القارة الهندية فى بيان العقيدة الصحيحة: جهود الشيخ أحمد السرهندى نموذجا
الدکتورہ منزه بتول ABSTRACT: Mujaddid-e-Alfi
Sani Shaikh Ahmad al-Fārūqī al-Sirhindī (1564–1624) was an Indian Islamic
scholar, a Hanafi jurist, and a prominent member of the Naqshbandī Sufi order.
He has been described as a Mujaddid, meaning "the reviver" for his
work in rejuvenating Islam and opposing the newly made religion of Din-i Ilahi
and other dissident opinions of Mughal emperor Akbar. Shaikh Ahmad Sirhindi's
teaching emphasized the inter-dependence of both the Sufi path and sharia,
stating that "what is outside the path shown by the prophet is forbidden.
Shaykh Ahmad Sirhindi advanced the notion of wahdat ash-shuhūd (oneness of
appearance). According to this doctrine, the experience of unity between God
and creation is purely subjective and occurs only in the mind of the Sufi who
has reached the state of fana' fi Allah (to forget about everything except
Almighty Allah). Sirhindi consi-dered wahdat ash-shuhūd to be superior to
wahdat al-wujūd (oneness …