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'Abd
al-Qadir al-Jilani (born A.D. 1077, died 1166 in Baghdad)
is probably the best known saint of Islam and certainly
the most widely venerated. A visit to his tomb in Baghdad,
over which Sultan Suleyman built a fine monument in 1535,
is still the goal of many pilgrims.
His works (mainly
prayers attributed to him) are still being printed in Cairo;
he is well known in Pakistan and Muslim India, as well.
He is so much at home in West Africa that the Algerians
claim he was a native of their country, even though it is
known that he was born in the province of Jilan in northern
Persia, along the Caspian coast.
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"At
once the head and body grew together again" ("The
Harrier")
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‘Abd
al-Qadir is frequently mentioned in Hausa literature in
Nigeria. He is venerated in Kenya and even in Zaire. In
Swahili there is a booklet of tales of his miracles, and
in Javanese there is a larger volume on his life and works.
He has thus become the most universal of the Islamic saints.
It is often difficult to assess where history ends and legend
begins in the numerous tales told about him, but the believers
are not worried by such details.
The legends presented here have been taken from collections
of tales told about 'Abd al-Qadir in Africa, Indonesia,
and the Middle East. Most of these tales are extremely popular
and are retold in many languages; some are of pre-Islamic
origin. Essentially the tales are not episodes from the
saint's life but are fables or legends, that is, stories
with a moral.
For instance, in the tale of the chicken bones, a young
disciple has to begin by eating dry bread. Then, when he
has achieved complete power over all his physical desires
by continuous asceticism he will have the power to bring
dead animals back to life.
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