"Makran as the Sacred Center of the Zikri Religion: A Historical, Theological, and Cultural Study"
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17564507
الملخص
This research paper explores the historical, theological, and cultural evolution of Makran, a region that has served as a spiritual and geographical nucleus of the Zikri faith in Balochistan. The study traces Makran’s transformation from an ancient crossroads of civilizations to a center of distinctive religious identity. Drawing upon classical sources such as Arrian, Strabo, al-Baladhuri, al-Ya‘qubi, al-Istakhri, and Yaqut al-Hamawi, the paper establishes that Makran—known to the Greeks as Gedrosia—has long been an intersection of Persian, Arab, and Indian influences.
During the Umayyad period, Makran became a frontier province following the Arab expansion into Sindh, while under the Abbasids, it developed into a hub of trade, scholarship, and Sufi mysticism. After the decline of Abbasid authority, Baloch tribes such as the Rind, Lashari, Gichki, and Hot established semi-independent rule, providing fertile ground for new religious movements.
By the fifteenth century, the Mahdavi movement—founded by Syed Muhammad of Jaunpur—reached Makran, where its teachings took root among the local tribes and evolved into what is now known as the Zikri religion. The Zikris emphasized the remembrance of God (Zikr) as the core of worship and regarded Koh-i-Murad near Turbat as their sacred center.
The paper concludes that Makran is not merely a barren landscape but a living symbol of cultural synthesis, where ancient civilizations, Islamic mysticism, and local Baloch traditions converged to shape a unique spiritual identity.