Poetry Style
The verse form Bulleh Shah primarily employed is
called the Kafi, a style of Punjabi, Sindhi and
Siraiki poetry used not only by the Sufis of Sindh
and Punjab, but also by Sikh gurus.
Bulleh Shah’s poetry and philosophy strongly
criticizes Islamic religious orthodoxy of his day.
A Beacon of Peace
Bulleh
Shah's time was marked with communal strife between
Muslims and Sikhs. But in that age Baba Bulleh Shah
was a beacon of hope and peace for the citizens of
Punjab. While Bulleh Shah was in Pandoke, Muslims
killed a young Sikh man who was riding through their
village in retaliation for murder of some Muslims by
Sikhs. Baba Bulleh Shah denounced the murder of an
innocent Sikh and was censured by the mullas and
muftis of Pandoke. Bulleh Shah maintained that
violence was not the answer to violence.Bulleh Shah
also hailed Guru Tegh Bahadur as a ghazi (Islamic
term for a religious warrior) and incurred the wrath
of the fanatic muslims at the time.
Humanist
Bulleh Shah’s writings represent him as a humanist,
someone providing solutions to the sociological
problems of the world around him as he lives through
it, describing the turbulence his motherland of
Punjab is passing through, while concurrently
searching for God. His poetry highlights his
mystical spiritual voyage through the four stages of
Sufism: Shariat (Path), Tariqat (Observance),
Haqiqat (Truth) and Marfat (Union). The simplicity
with which Bulleh Shah has been able to address the
complex fundamental issues of life and humanity is a
large part of his appeal. Thus, many people have put
his kafis to music, from humble street-singers to
renowned Sufi singers like the Waddali Brothers,
Abida Parveen and Pathanay Khan, from the
synthesized techno qawwali remixes of UK-based Asian
artists to the rock band Junoon.
Bulleh Shah’s popularity stretches uniformly across
Hindus, Sikhs and Muslims, to the point that much of
the written material about this philosopher is from
Hindu and Sikh authors.
Modern Renditions
In the 1990s Junoon, Asia's biggest rock band from
Pakistan, rendered such poems as Aleph (Ilmon Bas
Kareen O Yaar) and Bullah Ki Jaana. In 2004, Rabbi
Shergill successfully performed the unlikely feat of
turning the abstruse metaphysical poem Bullah Ki
Jaana into a Rock/Fusion song, which became hugely
popular in India and Pakistan. The Wadali Bandhu, a
Punjabi Sufi group from India, also released a
version of Bullah Ki Jaana on their album Aa Mil
Yaar...Call of the Beloved. Another version was
performed by Lakhwinder Wadali titled simply Bullah.
Bulleh Shah's verses have also been adapted and used
in Bollywood film songs. Examples include the songs
"Chaiyya Chaiyya" and Thayya Thayya in the 1998 film
Dil Se. The 2007 Pakistani movie Khuda Kay Liye
includes Bulleh Shah's poetry in the song Bandeya
Ho. A 2008 film, 'A wednesday', had a song, "Bulle
Shah, O yaar mere" in its soundtrack. In 2009,
Episode One of Pakistan's Coke Studio Season 2
featured a collaboration between Sain Zahoor and
Noori, "Aik Alif".
Death
He died in 1757, and his tomb is located in Kasur,
Pakistan.