Forty Hadith of Shah Waliullah Dehlawi
Delhi · 1762
1703 CE–1762 CE · Mecca
Shah Wali Allah al-Dihlawi (1703-1762) was one of the most influential Muslim scholars of Mughal India, remembered above all for reviving the study of hadith (reports of the Prophet Muhammad's sayings and deeds) in the subcontinent. Born in a village called Phulat in the Muzaffarnagar district near Delhi, he was educated by his father, Shah Abd al-Rahim, a jurist and Sufi (Islamic mystic) who had helped compile a major Mughal legal digest and founded the Madrasa-i Rahimiyya in Delhi. Wali Allah began teaching there in his teens and led it for some years.
Around 1730-31 he travelled to the Hijaz for the pilgrimage (hajj) and remained roughly fourteen months in Mecca and Medina, studying hadith and law with scholars including Abu Tahir al-Kurdi al-Madani. He returned to Delhi about 1732 and devoted the rest of his life to writing and teaching, producing some fifty works. His best-known book, Hujjat Allah al-Baligha ("The Conclusive Argument from God"), seeks the underlying purposes of Islamic law.
He sought to reconcile the four Sunni legal schools (madhhabs) and is regarded by later admirers as a mujaddid, a "renewer" of the faith — a status asserted by his followers rather than a neutral fact. His Persian translation of the Qur'an (Fath al-Rahman) was, it is reported, sharply opposed by some scholars who held that the Qur'an should not be rendered out of Arabic. He died in Delhi in 1762; two of his sons later translated the Qur'an into Urdu.
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Travelled to the Hijaz for the hajj around 1730-31; the ship is reported to have reached Jeddah on 22 May 1731 (AH 1143). Sources vary on the exact departure year (1730 vs 1731) and on how the roughly fourteen-month stay was divided between Mecca and Medina; the split is not settled.
Mecca (Makka), in the Hejaz of western Saudi Arabia, is the birthplace of the Prophet Muhammad and the site of the Ka'ba; it is Islam's holiest city and the destination of the annual hajj pilgrimage, toward which Muslims pray. As a centre of learning that drew scholars from across the Muslim world, it hosted many of the figures connected here during periods of study, teaching, or pilgrimage.
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Shah Wali Allah al-Dihlawi’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Delhi · 1762