Arambaug - Khoja Shia Ishna Ashari Jamaat Arambaug (Cemetery)

21 reviews

52, Mount Road, Byculla East, Rambhau Bhogle Marg, Cemetery, Naralwadi, Byculla, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400010, India

ksijamat.org

+911123778248

About

Arambaug - Khoja Shia Ishna Ashari Jamaat Arambaug (Cemetery) is a Cemetery located at 52, Mount Road, Byculla East, Rambhau Bhogle Marg, Cemetery, Naralwadi, Byculla, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400010, India. It has received 21 reviews with an average rating of 4.8 stars.

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Hours

MondayOpen 24 hours
TuesdayOpen 24 hours
WednesdayOpen 24 hours
ThursdayOpen 24 hours
FridayOpen 24 hours
SaturdayOpen 24 hours
SundayOpen 24 hours

F.A.Q

Frequently Asked Questions

  • The address of Arambaug - Khoja Shia Ishna Ashari Jamaat Arambaug (Cemetery): 52, Mount Road, Byculla East, Rambhau Bhogle Marg, Cemetery, Naralwadi, Byculla, Mumbai, Maharashtra 400010, India

  • Arambaug - Khoja Shia Ishna Ashari Jamaat Arambaug (Cemetery) has 4.8 stars from 21 reviews

  • Cemetery

  • "A cemetery or graveyard is a place where the remains of dead people are buried or otherwise interred"

    "The cemetery has a separate prayer hall for ladies too"

    "Peace for soul and even living person goes there n feels great "

    "Peace and reminder for hereafter "

    "Very peaceful and spiritual place"

Reviews

  • Adib Asgar Rizvi

A cemetery or graveyard is a place where the remains of dead people are buried or otherwise interred. The word cemetery (from Greek κοιμητήριον, "sleeping place") ]implies that the land is specifically designated as a burial ground and originally applied to the Shia imami The term graveyard is often used interchangeably with cemetery, but a graveyard primarily refers to a burial ground within a churchyard. The intact or cremated remains of people may be interred in a grave, commonly referred to as burial, or in a tomb, an "above-ground grave" (resembling a sarcophagus), a mausoleum, columb Some 600 years ago a missionary by the name of Pir Sadruddin arrived in Sind in India. There are a number of myths about his origins. The most common consensus among historians is that he was Dai (representative or emissary) of the Nizari branch of the Ismaili sect. Some have suggested that he was a Sufi teacher from Iran. There is even a story that he was a Hindu priest by the name Sahdev who had been caught stealing in the temple and hence disgraced and defrocked. He then left the temple, changed his appearance and took on the name of Sadr Din. Pir Sadruddin lived for some time amongst the rich Hindu landowners called Thakkers. He studied their way of life and of worship. The Thakkers believed that the god Vishnu had lived through nine incarnations on this earth. They were waiting for the tenth. Pir Sadruddin managed to convince them that Hazrat Ali (AS.) was the Dasmo Awtaar of Vishnu (The Tenth Incarnation). He converted quite a number of the Thakkers into a faith called Satpanth (True Path) - a peculiar admixture of Sufic/Hindu ideas. (The main book called Das Awtar was considered a primary text for the followers of the Aga Khan until very recently.) Some historians maintain that he converted the Thakkers to Nizari Ismailis. Whatever may be the case, these converts could no longer be called Thakkers in the Hindu community and Pir Sadruddin gave them the title of Khwaja. The word Khoja is a phonetic corruption of the word Khwaja. Over a period of time, several pirs came after Sadrudin and gradually, the beliefs crystallised to those of the Ismaili Nizari faith; particularly after the arrival of the Aga Khan 1 from Iran to India in the first half of the 19th Century. By this time the Khojas had spread all over over Kutch and Gujarat. Some had also moved to Bombay and Muscat. They paid their dues to the Ismaili Jamaat Khaana and lived quite harmoniously within their society. The main place of worship was the Jamaat Khaana and the (Jamaat) community was organised round the Jamaat Khaana - which served as a religious as well as a social centre With the arrival of the Aga Khan 1 in India, greater control was exercised by the Aga Khan in the affairs of the community. This led to certain groups dissenting and being ousted from the Jamaat Khaana. The most celebrated one was the case of the Bar Bhaya where an influential family by the name of Habib Ibrahim refused to accept the dictate (firman) by the Aga Khan that all the property that belonged to the Jamaat would now vest in the Aga Khan. Eventually this group was out-casted and influenced by the Sunni Aalims they became Sunnites. This was followed by several court cases and much commotion in the community, In the early 1800s some Khojas went for Ziyarat and while in Najaf they met the Mujtahid of the time, Sheikh Zainul Aabedeen Mazandarani. During their discussions they realised that there was a need for a teacher to come to India to teach the community Islam. Soon after, at the behest of Sheikh Mazandarani, Mulla Kader Hussein arrived in India and some Khoja families left the Ismaili sect and learnt from Mulla Kader the principles of Shia Ithnaasheri faith. From these few families the community has now grown to well over 100,000 Khoja Shia Ithnaasheries. The overall number is still very small when considering that there are an estimated 60 - 90 million Shia Ithnaasheries in the world today. The Ismaili Khojas number over 270 thousand and there are still a handful of Sunni Khojas

  • nïckysāyyêd

The cemetery has a separate prayer hall for ladies too.Its clean and tidy.It organizes religious activities throughout the year and gives prizes too in lucky draw too. It has a Shrine of Maula Hazrat Abbass,son of Hazrat Ali. The spiritual level increases after visiting this place.

  • Azmina khoja

Peace for soul and even living person goes there n feels great .... No fear of graveyard atall full day Quran recitation onn a clean tidy place fr all. A precious ziarat of roza alhamdulillah.... Allah bless the donors n care takers.

  • ali shroff

Peace and reminder for hereafter ... keep visiting and praying for Marhumeen ... one of the most historic cemetery of Khoja world

  • Asad Virani

Very peaceful and spiritual place. You can find graves of eminent personalities dating back to 1901 too.

  • Harley Hassan

Arambaug - Khoja Shia Ishna Ashari Jamaat Arambaug (Cemetery) one of the oldest cemetery in mumbai

  • Mohammed Ali Chhatriwala

Place to rest in peace

  • SadiqAli Lakhani

To recite fateha

  • Ali Dehlavi

Peaceful Place

  • Piyush

Nice place

  • Murtuza Amirali Panjwani

Cemetery

  • Ali kaba
  • UK Lakhani
  • Zaffer Mohamed
  • Sohail Punjani
  • Mohammed Abbas Shroff
  • Nehal Haider
  • Alireza Chaviwala
  • Mustafa Judge
  • Zaffer Mohamed
  • Ajhar Uddin

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