Bedil was born to a very pious family of Rohri. His father Khalifa Muhammad Mohsun was a disciple of Sayed Mir Janullah Shah Rizwi who was a great saint of his time, highly venerated and was chief of forty cardinals of Sufi Shah Inayat Shaheed of Jhok Shareef. Thus Bedil was brought up in such an enlightened environment under the guidance of Mir Sahib. It is narrated in the book Diwan-e-Bedil by Abdul Hussain Musavi that the midwife came and announced the news of the birth of a child to father who was sitting in the gathering with Sufi Januallah Shah. She said, "You have been blessed with a child but alas, his one foot is physically twisted." Upon hearing this father said," He is not physically handicapped by one foot. In fact, he is the flag of Rohri city." His father's statement proved true many years later. On his birth, he was named Abdul Qadir but he preferred to be called Qadir Bux. He was a staunch Muslim who molded his life strictly according to Shariah law. He was very simple and frugal in his lifestyle and gave away whatever he received to the needy. He followed the path of Ishq-e-Majazi to attain the heights of Ishq-e-Haqiqi as dictated by Mystic doctrine. He was a devotee of Lal Shahbaz Qalandar of Sehwan. Although he had a deformity in one foot, yet he undertook long journeys to Sehwan to pay homage to the Saint's Shrine. He went to Jhok Sharif to pay homage to shrine of Sufi Shah Inayat Shaheed and to Daraza, to visit the shrine of Sachal Sarmast.
Works
Bedil was the most voluminous poet of Sindh, even more so than Shah Latif, with 10 books of poetry to his credit. Most of his poems were written in Persian, Seraiki, Sindhi, Arabic, and Urdu,. His famous Sindhi works were Wahdat Namo and Surood Namo. He compiled as many as 23 books on prose and poetry written in Persian, Sindhi, Saraiki, and Urdu: the more known being:
Masanavi Riyaz-ul-faqr
Diwan-e-Sulook-ul-Talbin
Diwan Minhaj-ul-Haqiqat
Rumuz-ul-Qadri
Masanavi Nahr-ul-Bahr
Punj Gunj
Diwan Musbah-ul-Tariqat
Wahadat Namo
Sarood Namo
Diwan-e-Bedil
Masnavi Dilkusha
Diwan-e-Bedil
Fe Batn Ahadees
Taqwiyat-ul-Quloob
Zahoor Nama
Qurat-ul-Ain Fe Manaqib-ul-Sibtain
Insha-e-Qadri
Tarikhai Wafat
Khutbat-e-Juma
Fawaid-e-Manavi
Kursi Nama
Ramooz-ul-Arfin
Diwan-e-Bedil
Scholar Nabi Bux Khan Baloch has termed Fakir Qadir Bux Bedil as the last Sufi saint who wrote on Tasawuf and history of Sindh and taught mysticism through his poetry. Wahadat Namo is a thought-provoking work through which Bedil Fakir has presented the essence of Sufism. Bedil was the first scholar who wrote the history of Jhok Sharif and the sacrifice of Sufi Shah Inayat Shaheed of Sindh.
Poetry
Among his poetic compositions, we have his famous elegy, written on the death of Sachal Sarmast immortalising the master and incidentally himself too. Some of the verses from this elegy are:
Translation of some verses
The one whom you seek after,
Is none but your own self.
If you recognise yourself,
Then none other exists.
This and that are same,
Just like voice, sound and echo. Bedil! let it not slip from thy hands,
His annual Melo or Urs is held at his shrine in Rohri on the 14, 15, 16 Dhu al-Qi'dah – the eleventh month of the Muslim calendar where thousands of his Murids throng to pay homage to the great saint-poet.