Sareqaum


The Sareqaum family are a notable family of the Sylhet region who are mutawallis and khadims of the dargah of Shah Jalal. They are the only family who hold this title.

History

Following the Conquest of Sylhet in 1303, Haji Yusuf remained in Chowkidighi alongside Shah Jalal. At Jalal's instruction, Yusuf married a native Bengali Muslim woman. Before dying on 15 March 1346, Jalal appointed Yusuf to be the mutawalli of his waqf, which consisted of his mosque and future grave. Yusuf was given the title of Sar-e-Qaum and his descendants, the Sareqaum family, continue to hold this role. One of his closest companions, Yusuf was buried southeast of Jalal's tomb after his own death.
Faujdar of Sylhet, Isfandiyar Khan Beg officially recognised the inauguration of Shaykh Sareqaum Pir Bakhsh as the rightful guardian of Shah Jalal's dargah in the 1660s. Khan built a mosque near the dargah and the ruins of this incomplete mosque can be seen today, behind the trees near the Dargah Gateway.
A Jalsa-house was established in the Mughal era and to the west of this house remains the graves of the Mutawallis Sareqaum Abu Nasr and Sareqaum Abu Nasir. Sareqaum Abu Turab Abd Al-Wahhab is buried near Shah Jalal.
On 16 September 1936, Bengali Muslim litterateurs, gathered at the Sareqaum House where they established the well-known literary society known as the Sylhet Central Muslim Literary Society. One of the oldest literary societies in Bangladesh, its inaugural secretary was Sareqaum Abu Zafar Abdullah, a well-known Bengali writer and the Mutawalli of Shah Jalal's dargah. Other members of this society included Muhammad Nurul Haque and Syed Abdul Majid. Many of Abdullah's works were published in the popular newspapers of those times. His most famous work was Shaptak. The Sangsad as well its Al-Islah magazine were based in Abdullah's property. He was key activist during the Pakistan Movement. Abdullah's maternal cousin was the historian Nasiruddin Ahmad Chowdhury. In 1971, Abdullah started the construction of a minaret in the dargah complex which was completed a few days after the Independence of Bangladesh.
Moulvi Sareqaum Ubaydullah was a poet who famously wrote the Rakhaliya Bashi. From 1942, he was a member of the Sangsad. He hosted Kazi Nazrul Islam during the his visit to the Sylhet region.
The Mutawalli Sareqaum Yusuf Amanullah, son of Abu Zafar Abdullah, was vice-president of the Sangsad from 1988 to 1990. In 1996, Sareqaum Ikramullah was a sponsor of the Sangsad. Amanullah died in 2013 at the age of 76 years due to illness. He had one son and four daughters, and the Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina paid her respects. His successor was his son, Sareqaum Fatehullah Al-Aman. In the same year, the Khadim Sareqaum Yunus Ayatullah died. Sareqaum Khaled Ahmed was a director for the British Bangladesh Chamber of Commerce.