Hazrat Nizamuddin Darga
Hazrat Nizamuddin Darga
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390 anmeldelser
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24
Vijayaraghavan S
Chennai (Madras), India501 bidrag
sep. 2024 • Familie
Very unique experience and must do in Delhi especially if you are there in Thursdays to experience the Qawwali sessions
Reaching the dargah itself is an experience, walking through winding and narrow alleys. As usual in most places.in Delhi the hawkers and shop owners keep telling shoes not allowed and ask you to leave the shoes with them and try to also push some sales from their shop. Barring this unpleasantness,it's a great experience
The vibe and aura of the place is something to experience
Reaching the dargah itself is an experience, walking through winding and narrow alleys. As usual in most places.in Delhi the hawkers and shop owners keep telling shoes not allowed and ask you to leave the shoes with them and try to also push some sales from their shop. Barring this unpleasantness,it's a great experience
The vibe and aura of the place is something to experience
Skrevet 27. september 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Traveveller00849
Raipur, India60 bidrag
mar. 2024 • Familie
Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargha is built in mausoleum of Sufi Saint Khawaja Nawazuddin Auliya. We felt very blessed to be here. we offered our prayer to Khawaja Auliya and sat there for hours as it was a divine feeling visiting this place.
Skrevet 7. juni 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Daniel M
Chicago, IL7 bidrag
mai 2024 • Familie
Interesting working temple/shrine. Difficult to navigate through a crowded market to get to. You will need head covering and to leave shoes and socks at the entrance. Crowded with beggars which is difficult to see. Start by buying plates of flower pedals and incense to give as offerings.
When we made it to the shrine a local spotted us (not hard to notice two Americans looking confused) and explained the process of making our offerings at two different tombs. Then asked for a donation which seemed to go to the shrine. Definitely stay around afterwards to just watch everything happening.
When we made it to the shrine a local spotted us (not hard to notice two Americans looking confused) and explained the process of making our offerings at two different tombs. Then asked for a donation which seemed to go to the shrine. Definitely stay around afterwards to just watch everything happening.
Skrevet 8. mai 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Daniyal Shaikh
Mumbai (Bombay), India34 bidrag
mai 2023 • Familie
I really felt blessed to be here. it was a feeling of spirituality and inner peace. I went here with my family to seek the blessing of Hazrat Nizamuddin. the darga was located inner side.
Skrevet 22. april 2024
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
imran s
1 bidrag
mai 2023
Some place are very unique and interesting to see the attachment of my Life my rules and regulation of my life is time to explore new ways of learning and smart ways
Skrevet 29. mai 2023
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Ajay L
Cape Town sentrum, Sør-Afrika6 bidrag
des. 2022
What a wonderful visit on a Thursday evening with Qawwali' s . Muneer Bhai made it more special.
Thank you
Thank you
Skrevet 19. januar 2023
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
DIL KHAN
Jaisalmer District, India1 001 bidrag
mar. 2022 • Alene
This dargah it’s just a place of worship. It’s a place where you forget all your worries and submit to yourself to the Sufi Kalam and aura that surround the place .if in delhi it is a quintessential to visit this on a qwaali night listening to those Sufi singer heal your soul..
It’s my third time here… will go again if ever I visit delhi
It’s my third time here… will go again if ever I visit delhi
Skrevet 20. mars 2022
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Sarang
2 bidrag
jul. 2021 • Familie
Absolutely a safe place for women, no one is there to harm anyone as there is a separate place to them to be at dargah in parda (not directly visible to the mazaar) but yet close enough to pray and experience the divinity of the place. At the entry some shopkeepers will approach you to buy offerings like chadar rose petals, essences from yet and also for the safe keeping of your footwear but it totally upto you if you respond to them or not. Go there sit, visit dargah walk freely and simply ignore-respectfully (if you wish) when you are asked for donations etc. Muslim, sikh, hindus and even christians visit this holy place for taking blessings and get rid of unwanted spiritual/worldly loads and troubles.
Skrevet 17. juli 2021
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
MedhaviG
New Delhi, India66 bidrag
mar. 2020
Been here a few times. Peaceful place to sit and contemplate. Musicians perform Qawwalis regularly in the evenings
Skrevet 1. februar 2021
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Brun066
Firenze, Italia13 532 bidrag
sep. 2019
We learned from our guidebook that this complex, not far from the Humayun mausoleum, was worth visiting. So, after the visit to that mausoleum, we got transported to it by a motorickshaw.
This is a high place for Muslim worship in present-day India.
Dargah means mausoleum. Nizamuddin (full name: Khwaja Nizamuddin Auliya, 1238-1325) is a Sufi saint, belonging to the " Chishti" order. The order originated in present-day Afghanistan and is one of the four main orders of the sect of Sufi mystical "monks". Within the Chishti order, I learned that Nizamuddin is the founder of a particular branch, called precisely "Chishti Nizami".
The surrounding neighborhood was named after him, and also the nearby Hazrat Nizamuddin station, which is today one of the three main railway stations in Delhi.
Here the Nizamuddin shrine stands (which, however, is much later than him; as far as I read it dates back to 1562), together with other buildings, which host other shrines, shops related to his cult, and also a small baoli (stepwell).
To get to the mausoleum, from the spot of Lodhi Road where our motorickshaw left us, we walked a narrow, picturesque and crowded pedestrian street, lined with shops of all kinds. These shops are evidently favored by the continuous influx of shrine worshippers. After passing through an entrance arch, the shops also continue inside, further narrow and winding. Finally, after skirting the baoli, you reach the very crowded area where the shrine stands, under a large, highly decorated marble canopy surmounted by an onion-shaped dome.
No less evocative are other shrines that flank the courtyard where the main one stands.
Behind an offer, we received our tray of rose petals, with which to sprinkle the shrine.
The whole is extremely picturesque. And it certainly would have been even more so, if we had stayed until sunset, when, apparently, the Sufis sing poignant religious hymns. But it was not in our program to dwell so much.
As far as we could understand, after the Great Mosque this is the most evocative Islamic place of worship in Delhi.
This is a high place for Muslim worship in present-day India.
Dargah means mausoleum. Nizamuddin (full name: Khwaja Nizamuddin Auliya, 1238-1325) is a Sufi saint, belonging to the " Chishti" order. The order originated in present-day Afghanistan and is one of the four main orders of the sect of Sufi mystical "monks". Within the Chishti order, I learned that Nizamuddin is the founder of a particular branch, called precisely "Chishti Nizami".
The surrounding neighborhood was named after him, and also the nearby Hazrat Nizamuddin station, which is today one of the three main railway stations in Delhi.
Here the Nizamuddin shrine stands (which, however, is much later than him; as far as I read it dates back to 1562), together with other buildings, which host other shrines, shops related to his cult, and also a small baoli (stepwell).
To get to the mausoleum, from the spot of Lodhi Road where our motorickshaw left us, we walked a narrow, picturesque and crowded pedestrian street, lined with shops of all kinds. These shops are evidently favored by the continuous influx of shrine worshippers. After passing through an entrance arch, the shops also continue inside, further narrow and winding. Finally, after skirting the baoli, you reach the very crowded area where the shrine stands, under a large, highly decorated marble canopy surmounted by an onion-shaped dome.
No less evocative are other shrines that flank the courtyard where the main one stands.
Behind an offer, we received our tray of rose petals, with which to sprinkle the shrine.
The whole is extremely picturesque. And it certainly would have been even more so, if we had stayed until sunset, when, apparently, the Sufis sing poignant religious hymns. But it was not in our program to dwell so much.
As far as we could understand, after the Great Mosque this is the most evocative Islamic place of worship in Delhi.
Skrevet 17. mars 2020
Denne anmeldelsen er den subjektive meningen til et Tripadvisor-medlem og kommer ikke fra Tripadvisor LLC. Tripadvisor sjekker anmeldelser.
Good day. Tell me, please, is there the tomb of Amir Khosrov? Are women allowed in?
Skrevet 14. april 2022
I tried to go and wasn't really able to find the entrance. There was one archway down the narrow alley google led me to, but I was just uncertain if it was where I was trying to go, and didn't want to rudely wander into a neighborhood mosque or something! Can anyone offer any suggestions? I can't even imagine hiring an autorickshaw to drive down that tiny alley (although a car did drive through at one point!)
Skrevet 10. februar 2020
It is walking distance from the main road. Get a rickshaw or taxi to the entrance to the bazaar — which is almost exactly on the other side of the road to Humayun’s tomb — and walk to the dargah from there. It’s perhaps a ten minute walk.
Skrevet 11. februar 2020
Salam. Just wanted to ask if women are allowed to enter at any time? Also are women allowed in the same part as men? Thank you.
Skrevet 29. mai 2019
Walekum Salam, no BHAI JAAN woman are not allowed same part as man as far I know and I am sure because I was there many times, thanks for your questions, please say Salam from me also when you are there any time, Allah hafiz
Skrevet 29. mai 2019
Hello,
I want to ask if qawwali sessions are open on Thursdays or not ?
I heard about the discontinuity earlier.
Please let me know ASAP as I am here to visit the place today.
Skrevet 20. september 2018
Can i get locker facility there to keep my luggage ?
Skrevet 3. mars 2018
I don't believe you have that option. the less you carry with you the better
Skrevet 4. mars 2018
Is there Qawwali performance on other nites or times, apart from Thu nite?
Skrevet 1. mars 2018
Not that I know of. It’s a Thursday thing only I believe
Skrevet 1. mars 2018
Please suggest the best day and time to visit Dargah in December for qawwali?
Skrevet 1. oktober 2017
Qawwali scheduled for evening after 6pm on every Thursday. You can plan your visit accordingly.
Skrevet 1. oktober 2017
hi, is Dargah open past midnight. i will be arriving in Delhi at around 1AM in the night and would like to visit Dargah before travelling to Agra
Skrevet 7. juni 2017
unfortunately its closed, but You can always visit bangla sahib at that time
Skrevet 11. juni 2017
Are women allowed to sit inside for the Qawwali? I heard women can not enter the dargah (tomb), but can they attend the Qawwali?
Skrevet 27. mars 2017
hey earlier women were not allowed...bit now they can very much experience the magic of qawwali ☺
Skrevet 29. mars 2017
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