Usman Serajuddin

As one of the senior disciples of Nizāmuddīn Auliyā, he spent long years with him in Delhi and earned the sobriquet of Āinā-e-Hind (Persian: آینه هند Mirror of India).

[1] His shrine, the Pirana Pir Dargah in Gaur, West Bengal, attracts hundreds of thousands of devotees every year.

[3] 'Abd al-Haqq al-Dehlawi mentions in his Akhbar al Akhyar, the name of Akhi Sirāj Gaurī; which suggests that Siraj was a native of Gaur in Bengal.

As a result, he was taught the Islamic sciences for a further six months, by Shaykh Fakhr ad-Din Zarradi, a great scholar and another senior disciple of Nizamuddin Auliya.

After presenting himself to Nizamuddin, Siraj was then conferred the khirqa (initiatory cloak) of khilafat (succession) and was given the Persian title of Āinā-e-Hind (Mirror of India).

Amir Khurd, his fellow student, said that he won great esteem from the people of Bengal and "illumined the whole region with his spiritual radiance."

During this event, Jahaniyan Jahangasht's flag (which is kept in Jalaluddin Tabrizi's dargah) and Nur Qutb Alam's handprint are taken to Siraj's mausoleum.