What is the Chishti Order?
The Chishti Order (Persian: چشتیه, Čištiya) is a Sufi tariqa (spiritual path) within Sunni Islam, distinguished by its emphasis on divine love, tolerance, renunciation of worldly power, and the transformative practice of sama—devotional listening to music and poetry, most famously expressed through qawwali. Unlike some Sufi orders that maintained close ties with political rulers, the Chishtis established a tradition of spiritual independence, serving the poor and marginalized while refusing patronage from courts. The order traces its spiritual lineage (silsila) through a chain of masters back to the Prophet Muhammad via Ali ibn Abi Talib, linking each disciple to the primordial source of Islamic mysticism.
Origins & Lineage
The Chishti Order was founded by Abu Ishaq Shami (d. 940 CE), a Syrian mystic who was directed by his spiritual guide to settle in the town of Chisht, located approximately 95 miles east of Herat in present-day Afghanistan. Abu Ishaq trained Abu Ahmad Abdal, the son of the local emir, establishing a lineage that would be preserved through master-disciple transmission for two centuries in Central Asia. The traditional silsila passes through figures including Al-Hasan al-Basri (d. 728), Ibrahim ibn Adham, and continues to Khwaja Usman Harooni (d. 1220).
The order’s expansion into South Asia began with Moinuddin Chishti (1141–1236), born in Sistan, Persia. After studying in Bukhara and Samarkand and receiving spiritual initiation from Usman Harooni, Moinuddin settled in Ajmer, Rajasthan, around the mid-12th century during the reign of Prithviraj Chauhan. Known as “Gharib Nawaz” (Benefactor of the Poor), Moinuddin established the Chishti presence in India through radical inclusivity, welcoming Hindus and Muslims alike. His shrine, the Ajmer Sharif Dargah, remains one of the most visited pilgrimage sites in South Asia.
The Chishti lineage flowered through Qutbuddin Bakhtiyar Kaki (d. 1235) in Delhi, Fariduddin Ganjshakar (Baba Farid, d. 1266) in Punjab, and most prominently Nizamuddin Auliya (1238–1325) in Delhi. Nizamuddin’s influence was so profound that the order split into the Chishti-Nizami and Chishti-Sabiri branches. His disciple Amir Khusrau (1253–1325), the renowned Persian-Hindavi poet and musician, is credited with developing qawwali into its recognizable form, fusing Persian, Arabic, Turkish, and Indian musical traditions.
How It’s Practiced
Chishti practice centers on five core devotional disciplines (dhikr): reciting the names of Allah loudly (dhikr-i jahir), silent recitation (dhikr-i khafi), meditation, breath control, and spiritual retreat (chilla)—typically forty days of seclusion for prayer and contemplation. Practitioners also engage in regular study of key Sufi texts, particularly the 'Awārif al-Ma’ārif of Shihab al-Din Suhrawardi and the Kashf al-Mahjub of Ali Hujwiri, alongside collections of the sayings of the shaykhs (malfuzat), such as the Fawa’id al-Fu’ad by Amir Hasan Sijzi, recording Nizamuddin Auliya’s teachings.
The defining practice of the Chishti Order is sama (literally “listening”), a devotional audition designed to evoke the divine presence through music and poetry. Sama gatherings (mehfil-e-sama) typically feature qawwali—ecstatic devotional singing performed by a lead vocalist and chorus accompanied by harmonium, tabla, and dholak. The repertoire includes praises of God (hamd), eulogies of the Prophet Muhammad (naat), and poetry expressing mystical love, often in Persian, Urdu, Punjabi, and Hindi. While early Chishti sources debate the permissibility of musical instruments—some attributing to Nizamuddin Auliya strict conditions requiring adult male singers and no instruments—qawwali evolved to incorporate full instrumentation, becoming integral to Chishti ritual life.
Chishtis are forbidden from tilling land (to avoid entanglement with tax collectors), accepting government positions (shughl), or attending royal courts. They rely exclusively on futuh—unsolicited gifts from God delivered through strangers—distributing all offerings to the poor immediately, storing nothing for the next day as a sign of complete trust (tawakkul) in divine provision. The path emphasizes renunciation, humility, service to the poor, and the primacy of love over juridical observance, though Chishtis maintain strict adherence to Islamic obligations.
Chishti Order Today
The Chishti Order remains the most prominent Sufi brotherhood in South Asia, with millions of followers across Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh. Major dargahs (shrines) serve as active centers of spiritual practice and pilgrimage: Ajmer Sharif (Moinuddin Chishti), Nizamuddin Dargah in Delhi (Nizamuddin Auliya and Amir Khusrau), and Pakpattan (Baba Farid). Annual urs celebrations—commemorating the death anniversaries of saints—draw hundreds of thousands of devotees who participate in qawwali performances, offer prayers, and seek blessings.
In the 20th and 21st centuries, the order expanded globally. Chishti teachers have established centers in the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia, and East Africa. In 1937, Sufi Imam Al-Hajj Wali Akram founded the First Cleveland Mosque, making it the first public Sufi center in the United States. Contemporary expressions include the Ishq-Nuri Tariqa, founded in Pakistan in the 1960s as a branch of the Chishti-Nizami silsila.
Qawwali has achieved international recognition through artists like Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan, Sabri Brothers, Abida Parveen, and Rahat Fateh Ali Khan, introducing Chishti devotional aesthetics to global audiences through festivals and recordings. The practice has also influenced popular culture, including Bollywood film music (filmi qawwali) and fusion projects blending Sufi traditions with contemporary electronic and world music.
Common Misconceptions
The Chishti Order is not a rejection of Islamic law. While emphasizing inner spirituality and love, Chishtis insist followers observe the full range of Muslim obligations—prayer, fasting, pilgrimage—rejecting the antinomian tendencies of some mystical movements. Moinuddin Chishti did not “found” the order; he was the eighth master in a lineage established two centuries earlier by Abu Ishaq Shami. The order is often romanticized as universalist or syncretistic, but while Chishtis practiced radical hospitality and respect for other faiths—Nizamuddin Auliya famously said, “Every people has its right path”—they remained grounded in Islamic theology and practice.
Sama and qawwali are not entertainment. They are disciplined spiritual technologies designed to induce states of ecstatic absorption (wajd) and self-annihilation (fana) in divine love. Historical debates about musical instruments reflect ongoing tension between mystical and legalistic interpretations of Islam, not a unified “Chishti position.” The Chishti prohibition on engagement with political power was neither absolute pacifism nor disengagement from society; rather, it preserved spiritual autonomy and prioritized service to the marginalized over proximity to wealth and influence.
How to Begin
Seekers drawn to the Chishti path typically begin by attending qawwali gatherings at a local dargah or Sufi center, where the experiential dimension of sama can be encountered directly. Essential reading includes Annemarie Schimmel’s Mystical Dimensions of Islam and Carl W. Ernst’s Eternal Garden: Mysticism, History, and Politics at a South Asian Sufi Center. The Fawa’id al-Fu’ad offers direct access to Nizamuddin Auliya’s teachings. Listening to recordings by Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (particularly traditional qawwalis rather than fusion experiments) provides an entry into the sonic universe of Chishti devotion.
Formal initiation (bay’at) into the Chishti Order requires finding a living shaykh (spiritual master) authorized to transmit the silsila. This relationship—murshid and murid—is the heartbeat of Chishti practice. Interested practitioners can explore contemporary Chishti-Nizami teachers through centers like the School of Sufi Teaching or the Inayati-Maimuni lineage (Hazrat Inayat Khan brought Chishti teachings to the West in 1910). Begin with simple practices: regular dhikr (repetition of divine names), study of Sufi poetry, service to the poor, and cultivating the Chishti virtues of humility, generosity, and love for all creation.