Muhammad Zahid Vakhshi (Persian: محمد زاهد وخشی; 852-936 AH) was a Sufi of the Naqshbandī Sufi order. He lived in Vakhsh (or Vakash), a small town in present-day Tajikistan, about 100 km South of the capital Dushanbe.[3][4]
Naqshbandī The Sufi order from Khwaja Ahrar transferred to him and he transferred to Darwish Muhammad.[5][6] He was a close relative of Yaqub al-Charkhi, and according to some sources, he was his maternal grandson.[citation needed] His tomb is in Vakhsh.[citation needed]
^Ismail, Abdul Qader (27 November 2020). Litany for Seeking Favour of the One in Whose Hand is the Soul of My Beloved. ISBN 9781913663612.
^Adamec, Ludwig W. (14 December 2016). Historical Dictionary of Islam. ISBN 9781442277243.
^"Khwaja Muhammad Zahid Wakhshi (852-936 AH)". Ghaffari (Blog). 6 June 2014.
^Ahmad, Naseem. "The Contribution of Turkistan to the Development of Naqshbandi Sufi Silsila: A Study of Bahaud-din Naqshband and His Disciples' Writings on Sufi Doctrine". Academia.
^"20. Hazrat Muhammed Zahid Wali". Naqshbandi.
^"The Golden Chain: Khwaja Muahammad az-Zahid". SufiSpirit.
and 10 Related for: Muhammad Zahid Wakhshi information
2016). Historical Dictionary of Islam. ISBN 9781442277243. "Khwaja MuhammadZahidWakhshi (852-936 AH)". Ghaffari (Blog). 6 June 2014. Ahmad, Naseem. "The...
Conquest of Chechnia and Daghestan. Portland, OR: Frank Cass, 1994. Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani, Classical Islam and the Naqshbandi Sufi Tradition, Islamic...
MuhammadZahidWakhshi, d. 936 AH, buried in Wakhsh, Malk Hasaar, Tajikistan Darwish Muhammad, d. 970 AH, buried in Samarkand, Uzbekistan Muhammad Amkanagi...
Shah Gul Muhammad Ghaznavi (Bukhara) Mawlana Muhammad Sharif (Sirhind) Mawlana Pir Muhammad (Kashmir) Mawlana Jan Muhammad (Herat) Mawlana Muhammad Jan (Makkah...
Samarqand. Sultan Abu Saeed later became the grandfather of Zahiruddin Muhammad Babur, the conqueror of India and founder of the Mughal Empire. This alliance...