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Draft:Raden Hashem

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Raden Hashem
NameRaden Hashem
Other NamesSunan Drajat
Personal Details

Raden Hashem (875–940 AH) known by the pseudonym Sunan Drajat (Indonesian: Sunan Drajat) was a musician, preacher, and social worker and one of the 9 saints who spread Islam in the Malay Archipelago, particularly in Java Island[1].


Activities

He attended to the social affairs of the Javanese people, such as education, food, and care for orphans and the poor, and established a recently renovated school named the Sunan Drajat Institute of Islamic Studies.[2] He was also skilled in using Gamelan musical instruments and his instruments are kept in the Sunan Drajat Museum near his residence in Drajat Village, Lamongan Regency (Lamongan), East Java[3].


Lineage

Hashem bin Ahmed Rahmatullah Sunan Ampel bin Ibrahim Asmoro bin Jamaluddin al-Husayn bin Ahmed bin Abdullah Azmatkhan bin Abdul Malik bin Alawi Amm al-Faqih al-Muqaddam bin Muhammad Sahib Mirbat bin Ali Khali' Qasam bin Alawi bin Muhammad bin Alawi bin Ubaydullah bin Ahmed al-Muhajir bin Isa bin Muhammad al-Naqib bin Ali al-Uraydi bin Ja'far al-Sadiq bin Muhammad al-Baqir bin Ali Zayn al-Abidin bin al-Husayn bin Ali ibn Abi Talib and Imam Ali is the husband of Fatimah, daughter of Muhammad, peace be upon him and his progeny.

He is the twenty-second grandson of the Messenger of God, Muhammad, peace be upon him and his progeny[4].


Footnotes

  1. Salam, Solichin (1989). Nine Walis in the perspective of history. Jakarta: Kuning Mas.
  2. Ammar Zainuddin, Juli Amaliya Nasucha (2018). "The Internalization of Sunan Drajat Social Concept in Multicultural Education Implementation". Al-Tadzkiyyah: Jurnal Pendidikan Islam (in English). Vol. 9 no. 1. Lumpung, Indonesia: Universitas Islam Negeri Raden Intan Lampung. pp. 167–180. ISSN 2528-2476.
  3. The History of Sunan Drajat: Discovering Network of the Coming of Islam to Indonesian Archipelago. Surabaya, Indonesia: Research Team of the History of Sunan Drajat. 1999.
  4. Al-Mashhur, Abdulrahman bin Muhammad (1404 AH). Shams al-Zahirah (PDF). Vol. 2. Jeddah, Saudi Arabia: Alam al-Ma'rifah. p. 529. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 November 2020.

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