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Noor Mohammed Nooruddin

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SyednaNoor Mohammed Nooruddin37th Da'i al-Mutlaq of the Dawoodi Bohra
نُور مُحَمّد نورُالدّين
Mazar-e-Noorani, Mandvi, where Syedna Noor Mohammed Nooruddin is buried.
Da'i al-Mutlaq
In office
1710 AD (1122 AH) – 1719 AD (1130 AH)
Preceded byMusa Kalimuddin
Succeeded byIsmail Badruddin II
Title
  • Syedna
  • Maulana
  • al-Dā'ī al-Mutlaq
  • al-Dā'ī al-Ajal al-Fātimi
Personal life
BornJamnagar
Died1719 AD
Mandvi, India
Resting placeMandvi, India
SpouseFatema AaiSaheba
Children
  • Dosi Bai
Parent
Religious life
ReligionIslam
SectIsma'ili
Dawoodi Bohra
Jurisprudence

Syedna Noor Mohammed Nooruddin (Arabic: نور محمد نور الدين) was the 37th al-Dai al-Mutlaq (vicegerent) of the Dawoodi Bohra Community, a subsect of Shia Islam.

Early life

Noor Mohammad Nooruddin was born in Jamnagar in the era of his great-grandfather, the 34th Dai Syedna Ismail Badruddin I bin Mulla Raj. Syedna Zakiuddin nurtured Syedna Nooruddin and brought him up. Syedna Nooruddin served his grandfather Abduttayyeb Zakiuddin II with devotion, especially in his last illness. Before Syedna Zakiuddin died in 1110 AH/1699 AD, he bestowed Syedna Nooruddin his ring, “indicating his future accession to the rutba of Dai al-Mutlaq”. Nooruddin served his father, Musa Kalimuddin, with devotion, and aided him in conducting the Dawat. Kalimuddin entrusted him with executing all the affairs of Dawat, appointed him in the rutba of Mazoon, and made him also his Mansoos. When Kalimuddin died in 1122 AH/1710 AD, Nooruddin became Da'i al-Mutlaq.

Jamnagar

The ruler of Jamnagar, the ‘Jaam’ Laakha, was against him, wanting to forcefully collect money, and forced him to leave his home and town, secretly one midnight, with only three companions (among them the 39th Dai Syedna Ibrahim Wajiuddin). It was the monsoon season, and Syedna Nooruddin walked all night in the rain. He passed through Boodri, Daruda, Wankaner and finally to Morvi, where the king of Morvi, Raja Kayaji welcomed him. Meanwhile, when the Jaam found out that Syedna Nooruddin was in Morvi, he wrote to the Raja to have him sent back, but the Raja refused. Outraged, the Jaam looted Syedna Nooruddin’s home and possessions in Jamnagar.

Six months after looting Syedna Nooruddin’s possessions, the ‘Jaam’ fell ill, and with his body infested with parasitic worms, he died a terrible, painful death. The ‘Jaam’ was succeeded by his son, the new Jaam Raj Singh, who was a devotee of Syedna Nooruddin. When Raj Singh was a youth, Syedna Nooruddin saved him from poison fed to him by his stepmother. Raj Singh invited Syedna Nooruddin to come back to Jamnagar. In Dhu-l-Hijja 1124 AH, Syedna Nooruddin was received by Jaam Raj Singh himself with pomp and ceremony in the presence of his full army and all communities. He returned all the possessions that his father had looted, in addition to the chit of credit for 330,000 gold Jaamis that his father had extorted.

Mandvi

Some time thereafter, Jaam Raj Singh was murdered by his step-brother, who took the throne. Syedna Nooruddin did not feel safe anymore in Jamnagar, and he migrated to Mandvi, a port on the Kachchh coast, where he set up his home, and lived there for the rest of his life. His period of Dawat was 1122-1130 AH/1710-1719 AD (he died on 4 Rajab 1130). He left behind three young children under the age of eight.

Mausoleum

Syedna Noor Mohammed is buried in al-Qubbah al-Nooraniyyah (Mazar-e-Noorani) in Mandvi, India. It was reconstructed with marble and inaugurated in October 1999 by Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin. The mausoleum houses the graves of Abdulkarim bhai, Syedna Noor Mohammed Nooruddin, Fatema AaiSaheba, Phool BaiSaheba, Haleema AaiSaheba, Dosi bai, Noor bhai, Syedi Raj bhai, Sheikh AbdeMusa Meethabhai, Sheikh Ismailji, Syedi Sheikh-Adam Safiyuddin, Sheikh Shamsuddin and Rehmat bai.

Succession

He was succeeded by the 38th Dai Ismail Badruddin II. Subsequent Dais from this dynasty were syedna Abduttayyeb Zakiuddin III (41), syedna Yusuf Najmuddin (42), syedna Abde Ali Saifuddin (43), and syedna Mohammed Badruddin (46). This Dynasty was descended from Molai Bharmal. The present dynasty of Dais is descended from Molai Tarmal, the brother of Molai Bharmal. The present Dynasty started from the 44th Dai syedna Mohammed Ezzuddin, then his brother syedna Tayyeb Zainuddin and his progeny. The present Dai syedna Mufaddal Saifuddin is the 6th generation direct descendent of syedna Tayyeb Zainuddin.

References

  1. "Mazar-E-Noorani Mandvi". www.mazarenoorani.com. Archived from the original on 6 December 2005. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  2. "Akhbar - Syedna Noor Mohammed Nooruddin Saheb (RA)". malumaat.com. Archived from the original on 8 August 2008. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  3. Syedna Taher Saifuddin’s Risalat, 1374 H titled Nahr un Noor, p. 208
  4. "Archived copy". www.mumineen.org. Archived from the original on 28 August 2008. Retrieved 13 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. Syedna Taher Saifuddin’s Risalat, 1374 H titled Nahr un Noor ash Sha’sha’ani

Further reading

  • Daftary, Farhad, The Ismaili, Their History and Doctrine (Chapter -Mustalian Ismailism- p. 300-310)
  • Lathan, Young, Religion, Learning and Science
  • Bacharach, Joseph W. Meri, Medieval Islamic Civilisation
Shia Islam titles
Noor Mohammed Nooruddin Dā'ī al-MutlaqBorn: Jamnagar Died: 1719 AD Mandvi, India
Preceded byMusa Kalimuddin 37th Dā'ī al-Mutlaq
1122–1130 AH/1711–1719 AD
Succeeded byIsmail Badruddin II
Da'i al-Mutlaqs of Tayyibi Isma'ilism
Commonly recognized
  1. Dhu'ayb ibn Musa
  2. Ibrahim ibn al-Husayn al-Hamidi
  3. Hatim ibn Ibrahim
  4. Ali ibn Hatim
  5. Ali ibn Muhammad ibn al-Walid
  6. Ali ibn Hanzala
  7. Ahmad ibn Mubarak
  8. al-Husayn ibn Ali
  9. Ali ibn al-Husayn
  10. Ali ibn al-Husayn
  11. Ibrahim ibn al-Husayn
  12. Muhammad ibn Hatim
  13. Ali Shams al-Din I
  14. Abd al-Muttalib
  15. Abbas ibn Muhammad
  16. Abdallah Fakhr al-Din
  17. al-Hasan Badr al-Din I
  18. Ali Shams al-Din II
  19. Idris Imad al-Din
  20. al-Hasan Badr al-Din II
  21. al-Husayn Husam al-Din
  22. Ali Shams al-Din III
  23. Muhammad Izz al-Din I
  24. Yusuf Najm al-Din I
  25. Jalal Shamshuddin bin Hasan
  26. Dawood Bin Ajabshah
Dawoodi Bohra line
  1. Dawood Bin Qutubshah
  2. Sheikh Aadam Safiuddin
  3. Abduttayyeb Zakiuddin
  4. Ali Shamsuddin Bin Moulai Hasan
  5. Kasim Khan Zainuddin
  6. Qutubuddin Shaheed
  7. Feer Khan Shujauddin
  8. Ismail Badruddin I
  9. Abduttayyeb Zakiuddin II
  10. Musa Kalimuddin
  11. Noor Mohammad Nooruddin
  12. Ismail Badruddin II
  13. Ibrahim Wajiuddin
  14. Hebatullah-il-Moayed Fiddeen
  15. Abduttayyeb Zakiuddin Bin Badruddin
  16. Yusuf Najmuddin II
  17. Abde Ali Saifuddin
  18. Mohammed Ezzuddin
  19. Tayyeb Zainuddin
  20. Mohammed Badruddin
  21. Abdul Qadir Najmuddin
  22. Abdul Husain Husamuddin
  23. Mohammad Burhanuddin
  24. Abdullah Badruddin
  25. Taher Saifuddin
  26. Mohammed Burhanuddin
  27. Mufaddal Saifuddin
Sulaymani line
  1. Sulayman bin Hassan
  2. Ali bin Sulayman
  3. Ibrahim bin Muhammad bin al-Fahd al-Makrami
  4. Muhammad bin Isma'il
  5. Hibat-Allah bin Ibrahim
  6. Isma'il bin Hibat-Allah
  7. Hasan bin Hibat-Allah
  8. Abd-al-Ali bin Hasan
  9. Abd-Allah bin Ali
  10. Yusuf bin Ali
  11. Husayn bin Husayn
  12. Isma'il bin Muhammad
  13. Hasan bin Muhammad
  14. Hasan bin Isma'il
  15. Ahmad bin Isma'il
  16. Abd-Allah bin Ali
  17. Ali bin Hibat-Allah
  18. Ali bin Muhsin
  19. Husam-al-Din al-Hajj Ghulam Husayn
  20. Sharaf-al-Din Husayn bin Ahmad al-Makrami
  21. Jamal-al-Din Ali bin Sharaf-al-Din Husayn al-Makrami
  22. Sharafi Hasan bin Husayn al-Makrami
  23. Husayn bin Isma'il al-Makrami
  24. Al-Fakhrī ‘Abdullah bin Muhammad
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