Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin: A symbol of piety, peace for Dawoodi Bohras

January 17, 2014 06:55 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 07:21 pm IST - Mumbai

Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin, the spiritual and temporal head of the Dawoodi Bohra Muslims, died in Mumbai on Friday at an age of 102. File Photo: K.R. Deepak

Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin, the spiritual and temporal head of the Dawoodi Bohra Muslims, died in Mumbai on Friday at an age of 102. File Photo: K.R. Deepak

He was credited with guiding the 12-lakh-strong Dawoodi Bohra community out of the shadows and leading them on to the stage of modernity and prosperity.

Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin, the spiritual and temporal head of the Dawoodi Bohra Muslims who died in Mumbai on Friday at an age of 102, provided dynamic leadership to the largely business-oriented community which claims 100 per cent literacy. He was known for insightful teachings.

Revered as the 52nd Dai-al-Mutlaq (direct in the line of Prophet Mohammed) by the Bohras, the Syedna’s love for environment, flora and fauna was legendary. He was also an Arabic scholar.

Born in Surat, the Syedna was educated by his illustrious father, the late Syedna Taher Saifuddin.

Syedna Taher Saifuddin personally trained the future Syedna and later affirmed him as his successor.

In 1965, Syedna Mohammed Burhanuddin succeeded his father at the age of 53, heralding a new era for the Bohra community.

Among his major contributions was to supervise and support the community’s literacy efforts through 400 educational institutions in the world to impart religious, spiritual and secular education.

The pride of place belongs to the Al-Jamiah Al-Saifiah Arabic Academy in Surat — an over two-century-old Arabic university — and its new campus built by the Syedna in Karachi in 1983.

The Syedna exhorted his followers to conduct businesses combining mercantile and Islamic principles.

With a view to foster healthy businesses, he institutionalized the Quranic concept of interest-free loans.

A few years ago, the Syedna established the Burhaniyah Business Counselling Centre in Mumbai to provide modern business solutions.

The Syedna strongly believed in giving back to nature through ecological conservation programmes and preventing environmental degradation.

Scores of agriculture, horticulture, apiculture projects, greenhouses, terrace farming, plantations and afforestation projects were taken up under the auspices of the Burhani Foundation (India). In 2011, he threw his weight behind efforts to conserve the sparrow.

On the social front, the Syedna encouraged and institutionalized the tradition of mass marriages to curb wasteful expenditure on opulent marriages.

In cities like Mumbai, he launched low-finance housing schemes.

At a macro-level, the Syedna took direct interest in the redevelopment of old, dilapidated buildings housing over 4,000 Dawoodi Bohra families in a small chunk of Bhendi Bazaar in south Mumbai.

In June 2005, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh inaugurated the landmark Saifee Hospital in Mumbai, set up by the community, which provides medical care to all sections of society.

The Syedna undertook the mammoth task of construction, renovation or restoration of several ancient and world heritage mosques, mausoleums and other buildings of historical significance worldwide.

Chief among these were the ninth century mosque of Imam Hakim, Al-Jame Al-Anwar in Cairo, and ancient buildings in Yemen, Syria and India.

The Raudat Tahera in Mumbai is a marble mausoleum of the Syedna’s father where the entire Quran is inscribed on the inner white walls in letters of gold and precious stones.

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