Haji Ali Dargah Chishti Mumbai , Sufis of India
Saint Haji Ali Dargah
Mumbai, India
Nestled in the heart of Mumbai, this sacred shrine radiates an atmosphere of profound tranquility. The air is perfumed with…
Visit Shrine →Browse 86 authentic Sufi shrines across India, Pakistan, Egypt, and the world. Filter by Sufi Order (silsila), country, or city. Every shrine includes visiting hours, adab etiquette, and spiritual history.
Saint Haji Ali Dargah
Mumbai, India
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Mumbai, India
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Visit Shrine →A Sufi shrine — called a dargah (Persian: court) or mazar (Arabic: place of visitation) — is the tomb of a Muslim saint (wali) who was considered to have attained a high level of closeness to God during their lifetime. In the Sufi tradition, the saint's spiritual power (barakah) continues after death, and the shrine becomes a place where seekers come to pray, seek intercession, and connect with the divine through the saint's presence. Sufi shrines are open to all — regardless of faith — and continue the saint's tradition of service through langar (communal feeding) and spiritual guidance.
The four principal Sufi Orders in South Asia are: Chishti (founded by Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti, r.a., in Ajmer — known for qawwali music and open doors to all faiths), Qadiri (founded by Abdul Qadir Jilani, r.a., in Baghdad — known for love and service), Naqshbandi (founded by Bahauddin Naqshband, r.a., in Bukhara — known for silent dhikr and close adherence to Sunnah), and Suhrawardi (founded by Shihabuddin Suhrawardi, r.a. — strong in Sindh and Punjab). Egypt's primary order is the Shadhili, founded by Abul Hasan ash-Shadhili, r.a.
The universal adab for visiting any Sufi shrine: (1) Remove shoes before entering the shrine area. (2) Cover your head — men with a cap, women with a dupatta or scarf. (3) Enter with your right foot, reciting Bismillah. (4) At the tomb: recite Surah Fatiha once and Durood Sharif eleven times, then make your supplication. (5) Speak quietly — you are in a place of prayer. (6) Non-Muslims are welcome — come with a respectful, open heart. Each shrine also has specific adab — see individual shrine pages for details.
Urs (Arabic: wedding) is the annual death anniversary of a Sufi saint — called a "wedding" because in Sufi belief, death is the moment of union between the soul and God. The Urs is the most spiritually charged time to visit a shrine, featuring continuous qawwali music from dusk to dawn, communal langar feeding thousands, recitation of the saint's poetry and teachings, and a Sandal ceremony where fragrant sandal paste is applied to the tomb. Major Urs events like Ajmer Sharif (6th Rajab) attract millions of pilgrims from across the world.
Yes — absolutely. Sufi shrines have always been open to all of humanity. The Sufi saints themselves explicitly welcomed devotees of every faith. Emperor Akbar (a Muslim) walked barefoot to Ajmer Sharif; Hindu devotees make up nearly 50% of daily visitors at Haji Ali Dargah in Mumbai; the shrine of Waris Ali Shah in Dewa Sharif draws Hindus and Muslims in equal numbers. The message of the great Sufi saints — "Love ALL, Hate None" — was precisely that divine love recognises no boundary of religion, caste, or background.