Sayyid Jalaluddin Surkh-Posh Naqvi Al Bukhari (Persian: سید جلال الدین سرخ پوش بخاری, c. 595-690 AH, 1190 – 1295 CE was a saint from the Indian subcontinent.
[2] Sayyed Jalaluddin Bukhari, who was born in Bukhara but later settled in Bukkur located in sindh alongside his in laws descendant from Muhammad Al-Makki.
[citation needed] According to legend: Jalaluddin Surkh Posh was on his way to India and met Chengiz Khan, the Mongol conqueror.
[7] Bukhari's biography and family history are cited extensively in such works as Gulzar-e-Mustafavi, Hilal-e-Mustafavi, Marat-e-Jalali, the Mazher-i-Jalali, the Akber-ul-Akhyar, the Rauzat-ul-Ahbab, Maraij-ul-Walayat, Manaqabi Qutbi, the Siyar-ul-Aqtar, the Siyar-ul-Arifeen and the Manaqib-ul-Asifya.
[4] Sikandar Lodi's advisor Syed Sadarudin Shah Kabir Naqvi Al Bukhari descendant through Sayyid Sadruddin Rajan Qatal a grandson of Jalaluddin Surkh Posh.
[8][9][10][11][5] There are a number of tombs of Bukhari descendants across Punjab, Sindh, Indian Gujrat, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Uttar Pradesh in India.
Some descendants of Jahaniyan Jahangasht moved to Kamalia and Sandhilianwali side then to Depalpur tehsil Dhole to convert 37 sub tribes to Islam and then Firozpur During the 1850s they migrated to Sri Mukstar Sahib region of Ferozpur regions of Kabbarwala , Fattanwala (Shrine of Syed Wazeer Ali Shah bin Ameer Ali Shah Naqvi Al Bukhari is well known in the area), Bharpoora, Sodheke (Depalpur Tehsil) Bahmaniwala (Ferozpur) with other regions with other branches of Naqvi Bukhari such as Hunjrawan Kalan (Hunjarawawala Haryana near Fatehabad) the Jamia Shahi Masjid also has a library placed by this family, Talwara Jheel (Rajashtan near Hanumangarh), and Fazilka India.
They then migrated back into the present-day Pakistan area mainly resettling in Dipalpur tehsil and abroad but initially travelled outwards from the headquarters of Uch.
The ceiling is painted with floral designs in lacquer and its floor is covered with the graves of the saint and his relatives an interior partition provides 'purdah' for those of his womenfolk.
It was built of cut and dressed bricks and further decorated, internally and externally, with enamelled tiles in floral and geometric designs.