In Jhajjar Hazrat Shakarbar mentioned to them that his first area of d’awa mission was the state of Narhar.
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Thus, in late 1302 AC Sripalnagar was permanently renamed as Narhar Sharif.
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He returned the first part to Jhajjar to tell the Chaudhari that all was well so far, and to start da’wa work there; ordered the second part to hide in the thick forest just on the outskirts of Narhar, while entered the city with Moulana Qamruddin Kabuli as his deputy commander leading the last third portion of his lashkar.
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Here, I shall only describe what I saw from age five till fourteen, that is, when we had to leave Narhar Sharif due to migration to Pakistan; and what I write may be verified from hundreds of my relatives and town mates in Hyderabad Sindh as well as from hundreds of Narhari Turks living in Moro Sindh.
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In early 1302 he arrived with his faithful soldiers in Narhar on a preaching mission, where a fighting was imposed on him by the then Raja of Narhar, which the Hajibi army won.
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Both the Chaudhari and the Nawwab opposed his idea on grounds that Raja Sripal Singh of Narhar is a very uncompromising man and would not permit him to work in that state, especially so if he went there with the size of an armed force that he had with him.
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Hazrat Hajib Shakarbar got the area then called Baagar (hard r), referring in particular to the state of Narhar in the Rajasthan province.
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However, these Hindi accounts cannot be taken as reliable as many questions remain unanswered and the two witers do not even seem to know the correct name of the famous Saint buried in Narhar’s great grand Dargah Complex.
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The Raja of sambar fled seeing his bother-in-law slain and Narhar was, again, in the hands of the Hajibi lashkar, this time for good.