Abstract This research examines the philosophical outlook and humanitarian contributions of the 13th-century Chishti Sufis in South Asia, with a focus on their distinctive approach to promoting human well-being. Prominent Chishti masters, including Khawaja Mo’een-ul-Din Chishti, Qutb al-Din Bakhtiyar Kaki, Baba Farid al-Din Ganj-i-Shakar, and Nizam al-Din Awliya, advanced a spiritual tradition rooted in compassion, inclusivity, and selfless service. Through institutions such as the Masjid, khanqah and langar, they established some of the earliest community-based welfare systems, providing food, shelter, and emotional support to people across religious, social, and economic divides. Their teachings emphasized ethical cultivation, spiritual discipline, interreligious harmony, and social equity, thereby shaping a pluralistic and morally conscious society. By merging spiritual ideals with practical service, the Chishti Sufis provided a holistic paradigm of human well-being that resonates with modern concepts of social welfare, peacebuilding, and communal coexistence. This study underscores their lasting impact on the cultural, ethical, and humanitarian development of medieval South Asia.
Faiz et al. (Tue,) studied this question.