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Kunangudi Masthan Sahib

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Kunangudi Masthan Sahib (1792-1838) was a Tamil Qadiriyya Sufi poet and composer.[1] His songs remain popular today, especially in the Gaana music of Chennai.[2]

Early life

Masthan Sahib was Born at Kunangudi near Thondi in Ramanathapuram district, he was named Sultan Abdul Kadir Sahib at birth his parents Nainar Mohamed Sahib and Fathima bivi were Wealthy Rowther parents but the son chose to give it all up, seeking the supreme truth. He became a Sufi, taking to the Qadariya order. His love for God he expressed in the form of songs. To him, God was the beloved and in some of the songs, in keeping with the Sufi tradition.[3]Eventually he gave up a worldly life and became an ascetic and mystic, wandering from place to place, living in forests, and eventually settling in Chennai.[4]

Family Background

he was a Grandson of Tamil Poet Minna Noor-ud-din who sing "பொன்னரிய மாலை", Minna Noor-ud-din father Peer Ravuttar and his grandfather Meeran kani Annaviyar (Meeran kani Ravuttar) sing "அரக்கான் மாலைச் சுருக்கம்" and Annaviyar Father Seiku Nainar Ravuttar (kananavirayar - கனகவிராயர்) also a tamil poet , Mastan Sahib family was a Aristocratic Poetic Family.[5][6]

Life

At the Tirupparankunram shrine, Masthan Sahib is said to have experienced as profound mystical awakening while undergoing chilla, a forty-day period of secluded meditation.[1] His major verse collection, the Masthan Saheb Padalgal, deals with the power of this shrine.[1]

Masthan Sahib taught his many disciples by composing around one hundred devotional and philosophical poems, totaling some 5000 lines.[4] Many of them were modeled on the work of kirtan composers and hymn writers like Thayumanavar.[4] Masthan Sahib's work has been described as having "pathos and feeling" equal to Thayumanavar, but with simple and colloquial language that was sometimes crude or obscene.[4] Masthan Sahib was also influenced by the works of Tamil siddhars (tantric adepts).[1]

In the second half of the nineteenth century, Aiyacami Mutaliyar composed a praise-poem on Masthan Sahib entitled Kunankutiyar Patirruppattantati.[4] Twentieth-century veena player V.S. Gomathisankara Iyer set his songs to Carnatic tunes, making them suitable for concert play.[3] An album of his works sung by notable Gaana singer Mylai Venu, was released by India's National Folklore Support Center in 2008.[7]

His dargah in Chennai still attracts pilgrims and visitors.[3] It is constructed with an architectural style influenced by Hindu temples.[1] Most notably, it has a mandapam (ceremonial hall or platform) resembling those in Tamil temples.[1] That he fused influences from Hindu singers with Sufi Muslim asceticism and teachings suggests his religiosity was syncretic, combining many strands of Tamil spirituality.[1] Also buried at his dargah are four of his disciples - Pulavar Nayagangal (Sheikh Abdul Qadir), Qadir Mastan Sahib, Madhar Bibi and Ibrahim Sahib.[3]

The locals of North Chennai, where he spent his last years, referred to him as Tondiar ("someone from Thondi").[3] So the neighborhood of Chennai where he lived became known as Tondiarpet.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Bayly, Susan (1989). Saints, goddesses, and kings : Muslims and Christians in South Indian Society, 1700-1900. Cambridge [England]: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-37201-1. OCLC 70781802.
  2. ^ Valan, Antony Arul (2020). "Gana (Gānā)". Keywords for India : A Conceptual Lexicon for the 21st Century. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. pp. 83–84. ISBN 978-1-350-03927-8. OCLC 1134074309.
  3. ^ a b c d e f V, Sriram (2013-09-03). "To sing like Mastan Sahib". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 2021-03-29.
  4. ^ a b c d e Zvelebil, Kamil (1974). Tamil literature. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. pp. 114–115. ISBN 3-447-01582-9. OCLC 3053475.
  5. ^ Kan̲akavirāyar (1990). Kan̲akāpiṣēka mālai (in Tamil). Aintām Ulaka Islāmiyat Tamil̲ Ilakkiya Mānāṭu, Kīlakkarai.
  6. ^ Vardhaman. Gyan Parampara Vol. 7 By Mahalingam ( Tamil) Vardhaman. p. 1.
  7. ^ "NFSC Releases". Indian Folklife: A Quarterly Newsletter from National Folklore Support Centre. 28: 22. January 2008.