In South Kashmir, a Persian Mystic Still Gathers a Crowd
By Rayees Ahmad Kumar
In the village of Berigam, tucked between the foothills of South Kashmir and the serene orchards, there’s a tomb that draws crowds.
No royal lineage, no battlefield glories—just a saint who came, stayed, and never asked for attention.
His name was Syed Dawood Simnani [RA], and for the villagers, his memory is not a relic, but a rhythm.
He arrived from Simnan, a city of scholars in Persia, sometime in the late 14th century.
A cousin to Mir Syed Ali Hamadani [RA], the beloved Sufi who brought Islam’s deeper roots to Kashmir, Simnani came not with a caravan of 700 Sayyids, but with a quieter mission. He had been a judge, a learned man, but he left his title behind. He chose a village few had heard of. And he stayed.
Berigam then was just earth and echo. Small homes, kind hands, Hindu rites. The villagers had never seen a man like him. They watched as he........
© Kashmir Observer
