خلاصه ماشینی:
RELIGIOUS RELATIONS OJI' INDIA WITH ARABIA1 Jogis - ACCOUNTS of jogis and anchorites who weaned them• selves away from the world are found in these books but the strangest account is that which Suleyman the Mer• chant has recorded from his own experience towards the middle of the 9th century A.
D. ), that is, a few years after the conquestof Sind, the conscientious · Caliph of the Ummayad dynasty, 'Umar bin 'Abdul 'Aziz, sent a messageto the people of Sind asking them to embrace Islam, many Rajahs· took to this faith.
Adoption of Islam by a Raja of the Punjab Frontier Balazari, the historian who flourishedtowards the end of the Brd century A.
H. ), is related : that a certain Raja of India sent a message to Ha. run al-Rashid, askin~ him to send a scholar of Islamic theology to acquaint him (the Raja) with Islam, and to enter into a debate with one of the Raja's Pandits.
H. Mahrog, the Rajah of Abra (Alwar in Sind) who ruled the territories between Upper Kashmir (modern Kashmir) and Lower Kashmir (modern Punjab) who was reckoned among the powerful Rajas of India, wrote to 'Abdullah bin 'Umar, ruler of Manstirah situated, in Sind, asking him to send a person who could acquaint him in Hindi with the Islamic faith.
sh ruled in Delhi after Sultan Ghori, and Naseru'd-dtn Qabacha in Sind, a scholar named Muhammad 'Auft started from Bukhara and came to India.
Doubtless, when the Muslim sufis came to India, they were influenced by the thoughts of the Hindu 211Vedantists.