Qadir Jilani Page
He once said: “If you see a saint walking on water or flying in the air, do not be impressed until you see how he stands before the commands and prohibitions of Allah.” That is his gift: grounding the extraordinary in the ordinary—in the sajdah , in honesty, in feeding the poor, in controlling one’s tongue.
So, when we remember Shaikh ‘Abd al-Qadir al-Jilani , let us not reduce him to miracles or lineage. Let us remember a man who wept out of fear of Allah, who fed orphans with his own hands, and who showed that sainthood is not about flying—but about falling prostrate . qadir jilani
Born in the Persian province of Gilan, he traveled to Baghdad as a young seeker, where he immersed himself in the rigorous traditions of Hanbali law, Hadith, and tafsir. Yet, his true legacy unfolded in the spiritual realm. Despite his profound learning, he lived for decades in ascetic solitude, wandering the ruins of Baghdad until his heart was polished by divine light. He once said: “If you see a saint
His magnum opus, Sirr al-Asrar (The Secret of Secrets), laid out a roadmap for the seeker: from repentance ( tawbah ) to trust in God ( tawakkul ) to ultimate gnosis ( ma‘rifah ). But he is best known for Futuh al-Ghayb (Revelations of the Unseen)—short, piercing discourses on self-accountability, hope, and fear of God. Born in the Persian province of Gilan, he