Jamal al-Din Saoji (Persian: ìàçàçÃÂïÃÂàóçÃÂìÃÂâÂÂ), also known as Jamaluddin Sawochi or Jamaluddin Savi, (d. c. 1232âÂÂ33 CE) was a Persian Sufi saint and ascetic, widely recognized as the founder and master of the Qalandariyya order. He is remembered for his radical renunciation of worldly life, his symbolic practices of self-denial, and for shaping the Qalandari movement that later spread across the Middle East, South Asia, and Anatolia. He is also revered as a grand spiritual master of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar of Sehwan Sharif (Pakistan) through his disciple Hazrat Ibrahim Mujarrad.
Jamal al-Din was born in Savah, near present-day Tehran, in the late 12th century. He reportedly studied the Islamic sciences in his youth and earned a reputation as a brilliant jurist, remembered in later Chishti tradition as a "walking library" (kutub khana-yi sayyar).
After traveling to Damascus, Jamal al-Din became associated with the hospice of âÂÂUthman Rumi. His spiritual transformation is attributed to an encounter with the radical ascetic Jalal Darguzini, which inspired him to abandon scholarship and embrace an uncompromising path of faqr (poverty) and renunciation.
He withdrew to cemeteries, practiced silence, lived on nature, and adopted the practice of complete shaving of hair, beard, moustache, and eyebrows, which became the hallmark of the Qalandari dervishes.
Although personally inclined to solitude, Jamal al-Din attracted several disciples, including Muhammad Balkhi, Abu Bakr Isfahani, and Jalal Darguzini. Through his spiritual lineage, he became a grand master of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar (d. 1274), the celebrated saint of Sehwan Sharif, via Hazrat Ibrahim Mujarrad.
Jamal al-Din later moved to Damietta, Egypt, where he lived in a cemetery. A famous account relates that he performed a "beard miracle" before the townâÂÂs magistrateâÂÂcausing a beard to grow, whiten, and disappear at willâÂÂwhich led to the establishment of a hospice in his honor. He died in Damietta around 1232âÂÂ33 CE, where a zawiyah (dervish hospice) was built at his tomb.
The Moroccan traveller Ibn Battuta, who visited Egypt in the 14th century, mentioned Jamal al-Din al-Sawi in his Rihla. He recorded that in Damietta was "the cell of the Sheikh Jamal Oddin El Sawi, leader of the sect called Karenders (Qalandars). These are they who shave their chins and eyebrows."
Ibn Battuta relates a story about the origin of the SheikhâÂÂs distinctive practice of shaving the beard and eyebrows. According to this account, a woman from Sawah fell in love with him and tried to entrap him. To repel her advances, Jamal al-Din shaved off his beard and eyebrows, preserving his chastity. Thereafter, he and his followers retained this appearance as a mark of renunciation.
He also describes a miraculous episode in Damietta in which Jamal al-Din demonstrated the ability to manifest and change the color of his beard before the townâÂÂs judge, Ibn Omaid. After witnessing this wonder, the judge became his disciple, built him a cell (zawiya), and requested to be buried at its doorway so that all who visited the saintâÂÂs tomb would pass over his own grave.