ufi saints or Wali (Arabic: ولي, plural ʾawliyāʾ أولياء) played an instrumental role in spreading Islam throughout the world.[1]
In the traditional Islamic view, a saint is portrayed as someone
"marked by [special] divine favor ... [and] holiness", and who is
specifically "chosen by God and endowed with exceptional gifts, such as
the ability to work miracles."[2]
- Abdūl-Khāliq Ghujdawanī
- Abdūl-Qādir Gilanī (1077–1166)[3][4]
- Abdul Razzaq Jilani
- Abūl-Khāyr
- Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi
- Abul Hasan Hankari
- Afaq Khoja
- Ahamed Mohiyudheen Noorishah Jeelani
- Ahmad Ghazālī
- Ahmad al-Tijani (1737–1815)
- Ahmadou Bamba Xadimou Rassoul
- Ahmed Yasavī
- Ak Shāms ūd-Dīn
- Akhundzada Saif-ur-Rahman Mubarak
- Al-AjamAli i
- Al-Aydarus
- Al-Badawi
- Al-Ghazālī
- Al-Hallaj
- Ali Hujwiri (990-1077)[5]
- Ali Mahimi (1372–1431)[6]
- Al-Hashmi (1260–1349)
- Ali Shah Pir Baba (1431-1502)[7]
- Ali-Shir Nava'i
- Al-Khārāqānī
- Al-Qāsim
- Al-Qayṣarī
- Al-Qunawī
- Al-Qushayri
- Al-Tirmidhī
- Alauddin Sabir Kaliyari (1196–1291)[8]
- Amīr Khusrow (1253–1325)[9]
- Amīr Kulal
- Ansarī
- Ardabilī
- Ajan Fakir
- Abd al-Karīm al-Jīlī
- Auliya (1238–1325)[10]
- Azan Pir (17th century)[11]
- Bābā Eliyās
- Bābā Fakr ūd-Dīn (1169–1295)[12]
- Baba Kuhi of Shiraz (948 - 1037 CE)
- Baba Shadi Shaheed (17th century)
- Badr ūd-Dīn
- Bāhā ūd-Dīn Naqshband
- Balım Sultan
- Baha-ud-din Zakariya (1170–1267)[13]
- Bande Nawāz (1321–1422)[14]
- Bākuvī
- Bāqī Billāh (1564–1605)[15]
- Bawa Muhaiyaddeen
- Bayazid-i Bastamī
- Ben Issa
- Bhita'ī (1689–1752)
- Bibi Jamal Khatun (d. 1639)[16]
- Bu Ali Shah Qalandar (1209–1324)[17]
- Bursevî
- Bulleh Shah (1680–1757)
- Chirag-e-Delhi (1274–1356)[19]
- Dara Shikoh (1615–1659)[20]
- Daud Bandagi Kirmani (1513–1575)[21]
- Dawud al-Ta’i
- Dehlawī
- Ghulam Ali Dihlawi
- Shah Waliullah Dehlawi (1703–1762)
- El-Desoukî
- Erzurumī
- Farīd ūd-Dīn Ganjshakar (1188–1280)[22]
- Fuzûlî
- Gharīb Nawāz (1141–1230)[23]
- Ghulam Farīd
- Ghousi Shah
- Gül Baba
- Hāfez-e Shīrāzī
- Haji Huud (1025–1141)[24]
- Hajji Bayram
- Hajji Bektash
- Haddad
- Hamedānī
- Abū Yāqub Yusūf
- Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani (1314–1384)[25]
- Hansvī
- Harabatī Baba
- Harooni
- Hujwirī
- Iraqī (1213–1289)[26]
- Ibn Adham
- Ibn ʿArabī
- Ibn Ata Allah al Iskandari ash Shadhili
- Imam Al Fassi
- Ismail Hakki Bursevi
- Jabir ibn Hayyan
- Ja'far al-Sadiq
- Jahanara Begum Sahib (1614–1681)[20]
- Jahaniyan Jahangasht (1308–1384)
- Jamī
- Jan-e-Jānāān (1699–1781)
- Jaunpurī
- Jazoulī
- Jilani Dehlvi (1024-1088)
- Jilī
- Junayd Baġdādī
- Khâlid-i Baghdâdî
- Kākī
- Kaliyarī
- Karkhī
- Khan Jahan Ali (d. 1459)
- Lal Shahbaz Qalander (1177–1274)[27]
- Machiliwale Shah
- Magtymguly Pyragy
- Maharvī (1730–1791)
- Mahmoodullah Shah
- Mahmud Hüdayī
- Mir Ahmed Ibrahim Ash Shadhili
- Mir Amjad Ibrahim Ash Shadhili
- Mian Mir (1550–1635)[28]
- Mir Sayyid Ali Hamadani
- Mir Shams-ud-din
- Mohammad Tartusi
- Moinuddin Chishti
- Mubarak Makhzoomi (1013-1119)[29]
- Muhammad Al-Makki
- Muqaddam
- Nāimī
- Nājm ūd-Dīn Kubrā
- Nasīmī
- Nasir Khusraw
- Nasreddin
- Nathar Vali
- Ni'matullāh Wali
- Nizamuddin Auliya
- Omar Khayyám
- Osman Fazli
- Otman Baba
- Pir Baba
- Pir Sultan
- Qahistanī
- Qutb ūd-Dīn Haydār
- Qutb ūd-Dīn Shīrāzī
- Qutbuddin Bakhtiar Kaki (1173–1235)[30]
- Rabbānī (ca. 1564-1624)[31]
- Rabia Basri
- Rāzī
- Rifa'ī
- Rukn-e-Alam (1251–1335)[32]
- Rumi
- Saadī
- Sabakhī
- Sachal Sarmast (1739-1827)
- Sahl al-Tustari
- Salim Chishti (1478–1572)[33]
- Salman al-Farisī
- Sanai
- Sarı Saltuk
- Sarmad Kashani (d. 1661)[34]
- Saint Nurī
- Semnanī (1308–1405)[35]
- Shadhilī
- Shah Abdul Latif Bhittai (1689-1752)
- Shah Badakhshi (1584–1661)[36]
- Shah Gardez (1026–1152)[37]
- Shah Jalal (1271–1347)[38]
- Shah Hussain (1538–1599)[39]
- Shah Paran (14th century)[40]
- Shāms-i Tabrizī
- Sheikh Edebali
- Syed Abdus Salam Ibrahim ash Shadhili
- Sheikh Gālib
- Shiblī
- Suhrawardī
- Suhrawardī
- Sharfuddin Shah Wilayat (1255-1346)
- Shaykh Syed Mir Mirak Andrabi ( 921A.H - 990 A.H)
- Sirri Saqti
- Sultan Bahu (1628–1691)
- Sultan Walad
- Surkh Bukharī (1192–1291)[41]
- Syed Ashraf Kashfi Shah Nizami o Gillani (1865-1965)
- Syed Shah Ali Hussaini Refai ul Qadri Sangde Sultaan Mushkil Aasan قدس سره العزيز
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