His father was from the tribe of BanÄ« Sa‘īd but moved later on to the tribe of BanÄ« ShikÄr. His
father was a follower of the QÄdirÄ« order. He was highly respected by the heads
of this order in the zÄwiya of Wark. The followers would come and visit him in
his home and he would host them and show them great generosity. He was made a
representative (muqaddam) of the order and they married him. He had many
children and one of them was SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj.
When SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj was seven years of age, his father entered him
into a
When they arrived at the door of the zÄwiya in MostÄghanem, the disciple sung
out at the top of his voice the words, ‘There is no deity worthy of worship
besides God.’ The sheikh heard his voice and came out to greet him. The man
introduced SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj to Shaykh al-‘AlawÄ« and he kissed the
sheikh’s hand. It was now time for the prayer, so the sheikh invited him to
call the people to prayer. SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj had a very powerful but
sweet voice. After the prayer, the sheikh gave him the litanies of the order. He
then immediately entered him into khalwa, and he quickly achieved results. The
sheikh ordered him to stay at his side so as to be of service to him. He would
teach the children the Quran and at other times watch over the cattle.
Later on, he was sent with a representative (muqaddam) of the order to the
region of ZawÄwÄ to gather donations and gifts for the mother zÄwiyah to be
built in MostaghÄnem. Their presence was immediately felt and people came from
all around to donate and listen to their teachings. Many people entered the
order through their efforts. However, the local authorities became suspicious
of their activities, so they were imprisoned and held for three months. After
his release, Shaykh al-‘AlawÄ« used his services again in the zÄwiya. Then after
some time he told him to head back to his homeland and gave him permission to
spread the tea chings of the order there.
He initially arrived in FarkhÄna where his sister lived, who was married to a
man from the region named al-Hajj Hammū. He was appointed an imam in a mosque
there. He soon moved to another mosque named Moulay Idrīs and there he called
people to join the order. People would come in great numbers both men and
women. It was at this time that one of his students, SÄ«dÄ« ‘AllÄl ZaryÅ«h,
married SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj to his niece, so he moved to the village of
‘AtÄ«tan where SÄ«dÄ« ‘AllÄl’s family lived. He would hold the dhikr gatherings in
his house there, but later they moved them to his father’s house in BÄni
ShikÄr.
More and more people were entering the order and the head of the QÄdirÄ« order
grew jealous of his success and feared that their followers would leave them
and enter into this new order. They had ties with the Spanish government at the
time, so they were able to chase him out using physical force if necessary. He
was forced to flee the region, so he headed to MostaghÄnem to consult his
sheikh what he should do. Sheikh al-‘Alawī told him to return, bear patience
and be steadfast. He went back to the region teaching children Quran in local
mosques. He continued to spread the teachings of the order, so his enemies came
back to attack him. They complained to the Spanish authorities and spread lies about
him, so that he was eventually arrested and imprisoned in the Taztūtin where he
was held in the caves there deep under the land. There he found solace in his
Lord. He would spend the night and day engrossed in invocation of God as
witnessed by soldiers who were guarding him there. Later they moved him to ZÄyu
and finally to Melīlia. He remained imprisoned in Melīlia for the next seven
years, but he was steadfast and faithful to his sheikh, in complete adoration
for him. Throughout his time in prison he would not move unless he had
consulted his sheikh.
This was how he obtained the contentment of his sheikh and thus his Lord. He
gained the wisdom of his teacher due to his patience throughout his tribulation
as expressed in the proverb, ‘It is through tribulation that a man is made
noble or is humiliated.’ He strived on the path to God, giving up his soul for
the sake of his Lord. There was no other disciple of Shaykh al-‘Alawī who had
been tried like he had. He spent years far away from his family and children,
who were but infants when he left them. He sacrificed all this out of love of
God and in order to give victory to his teacher’s order. By doing so, he gave
root to the ‘Alawī order in the Reef region despite the number of initial
enemies there. The Spanish authorities throughout his time in prison promised
him they would free him if only he would join another order, but he refused and
told them to return him to his cell. Once they had seen his sincerity and how
adamant he was to remain loyal to his teacher, the Spanish gave him certain
dispensations whilst he was in prison. They allowed him to have visitors
whenever they wished and the fuqarÄ were free to sit with him. They came from
all over the region to learn from him or ask him to pray from them. He also
granted some of the fuqarÄ the permission to recite the Divine Name with him
within the walls of the prison.
On his arrival to Melīlia prison, he found his fellow inmates ignorant of God
and heedless. They ridiculed him for occupying his time with meditation and
worship. They told him he was wasting his time and to give up his worship and
join them in playing cards and so forth. SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj saw his
opportunity. He agreed to join them on condition that if they spend one day
playing cards, the next day they sit with him and do as he does. On the first
day, he humoured them by playing cards with them. The second day he called them
to sit with him and recite after him the invocations he read. The days passed
on until the inmates no longer wanted to play cards and everyday was a day of
invoking God. He taught them the basics of their religion and gave them the
litany of the order to recite. The prison now began to resonate with the sound
of invocation of God and soon was embellished with the rites of Islam such as
the call to prayer, the five prayers in congregation, gatherings of invoking
God and the ‘hadra’.
This great man was the first to bring the ‘Alawī order to the Reef region and
was fundamental in establishing it there. Whilst in prison, he would give out
the litanies to followers, appoint representative for the order in the region
and establish zÄwiyahs there. The first zÄwiyah he established was the zÄwiya
of Sheikh SÄ«dÄ« Bil-QÄsim al-Sa‘īdi, who was an ancestor of the great SÄ«dÄ« Muhammad
bin QaddÅ«r al-WukÄ«lÄ«. He established the zÄwiyah while he was still in prison. At
the time, he directed the representatives of the order secretly, fearing the
Spanish authorities would catch wind of their activities. Many of his followers
were imprisoned and tortured, too for their joining the order. However, they
never submitted to the torture; in fact it only made them firmer and more
faithful to their teacher Shaykh al-‘Alawī.
Throughout the time of tribulation and torture, Shaykh al-‘Alawī would constantly
pray for SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj and his compatriots. Many people bore witness
that Shaykh al-‘AlawÄ« would single out the fuqarÄ of Reef for special praise. If
any faqīr from the Reef came to visit Shaykh al-‘Alawī he would ask them about
SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj inquire whether they had visited him or not. If they
told him they had visited him or came bearing his greetings to the Sheikh he
would bear them good tidings and warmly welcome them, telling them to hold
nothing but love for this man and to be loyal to him, but if they told him they
had not seen him or came with no news about him, he would turn his back on them
and ignore them. On another occasion, he was sitting amongst members of the
order and a group of scholars and at the end of his address he proclaimed,
‘This Sheikh, SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj, even if he were to claim his own order,
then he has truly paid out its dowry in full.’ Another time during a talk he
was giving before his followers, he said, ‘This sheikh, SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj
from the Reef, is in prison because of this order of ours. When he is brought
before the Spanish judge in court, he is asked to turn his back on the ‘Alawī
order and take on another order and he can walk free. He replies to them, ‘Take
me back to my cell.’ By God, if I were in his place, I would have thrown this
rosary to the floor,’ and the Sheikh at that point threw his rosary to the
floor. One time, Shaykh al-‘AlawÄ« said, whilst hosting a group of fuqarÄ from
the Reef, ‘Brethren, if any one of you is unable to visit me for any reason
then he should visit SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj, for he is our hand in the Reef. These
are but few of many testimonies of Shaykh al-‘Alawī regarding the station of
SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj in the ‘AlawÄ« order.
While Shaykh al-‘Alawī was in the east performing the pilgrimage, he met with
some Moroccans who had positions of authority in the Reef region and were
employed by the Spanish. He spoke to them regarding SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj’s
predicament and he asked them to use their influence in order to get the
Spanish to release him. When the Moroccans returned, they spoke to their
superiors in Tetoun and managed to convince them to issue his immediate
release. When SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj was released from prison, the fuqara came
from all around the region to celebrate the event. The Spanish authorities
called him to NÄdÅ«r and asked him to pardon them. They explained that they were
given false information from his fellow Muslim brothers who were jealous of
him. He forgave them and said he forgave those who plotted against him. They
thanked him and told him that from now on that if anyone appeared carrying
animosity for him and attempted to harm him, he could call them to court and he
could take his full rights from them. He replied, ‘I have no enemy other than
Satan himself.’
When he was released, the annual celebrations in MostghÄnem had arrived. SÄ«dÄ«
MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj headed off to
SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj was very humble. He did not speak unless necessary. He
would serve the fuqarÄ himself and prepare the beds for them at the time of the
festival. When the fuqarÄ came to the zÄwiya he would come out and greet them
himself and then sit amongst them. He would never raise himself above them nor
raise his voice over them. He would never get angry at those who mistreated
him. He would teach them with compassion and a gentle nature. He would spend
his own money on the fuqarÄ. When there was a festival, he would send out all
the invitations to all the fuqarÄ himself. On numerous occasions he would go
out and visit the fuqarÄ from around the region. Moulay Sulaiman would carry
out this responsibility for him at most times, though. He would travel with the
fuqarÄ to Tetoun, Tangiers, Qasr Kabir and Salé just to mention a few.
After Shaykh al-‘Alawī’s death, some of his followers who had bore jealousy and
contempt for SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj plotted against him with the support of
some notables in the region of BÄni ShikÄr. Their efforts failed, but SÄ«dÄ«
MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj felt it was best to move from Bani ‘All and build a new
zÄwiya in Melilia. From then on he would hold his circles there. People came
from far and wide and he entered many there into spiritual retreat and
invocation of the Divine Name.
When his time had drawn near, he was of good health and had no illnesses or
ailments. On that fateful day, he made his daily ablutions, walked out from his
house but suddenly ran quickly back. He ordered the teacher of the children in
the zÄwiya to prepare his bed and he laid down facing the direction of prayer. There
his soul left him. The news soon spread throughout the city. The fuqarÄ came
straight away, and both men and women were struck with grief by the news. Moulay
Sulaiman came with a group of fuqarÄ and sat by his head. He uncovered his face, kissed his forehead and bid him farewell for the
last time. He died on Thursday the 13 of July 1946 and was buried on the Friday
the day after.
Some of the Many Scholars who Bore Testimony that SÄ«dÄ« MuhammÄdÄ« Bil-HÄjj was a
Sheikh in the Alawi Order
Moulay Sulaiman
Sheikh Muhammad al-Madani (Major scholar in the ‘Alawi Order from Tunis)
Hajj Salih bin ‘Abd al‘Aziz al-Qadiri (First man to submit his full services
and time to the Order in Mostaghanem)
Sheikh ‘Ali al-Budilmi (Major scholar in the ‘Alawi Order resident in Tilimsan)
Sheikh ‘Abu Madyan al-Bushishi from Barkan
Sheikh Muhammad bin Qaddor from Karkar (A descendent of Muhammad bin Qaddur)
Sheikh al-Mukhtar al-Ghumari from Chefchouni
Sheikh Ahmad al-Hassar from Tangiers
Sheikh Ahmed al-Malusi from Qasr Kabir
Sheikh Muhammad Bil-Hajj al-Sinhaji from Fez
Moulay al-Tahir al-Timasmani (The grandson of Sidi Muhammad bin Qaddur)




