[3][4] Khawand Mahmud, known by his followers as Hazrat Ishaan was directed by his Pir Ishaq Wali Dahbidi to spread Islam in Mughal India.
It is a pilgrimage site in which congregational prayers, known as "Khwaja Digar" are held in honor of Baha al-Din on his death anniversary the 3rd Rabi ul Awwal of the Islamic lunar calendar.
[3] Mahmud was succeeded by his son Moinuddin and their progeny until the line died out on the occasion of the martyrdom of the last Hazrat Ishaan Kamaluddin and his family members by the Shiite warlord Amir Khan Jawansher in the eighteenth century.
It is believed that this successor is Sayyid Mir Jan.[12][13] Shaykh Ahmad Khatib was a prominent Islamic scholar from what is now Indonesia in the mid-19th century.
[4] In what is now Indonesia, the members of the Sufi order in Banten and Lombok led rebellions against the Dutch East Indies at the end of 19th century.