Ajmer Sharif
Dargah Sufi Tour
πΉ Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti Β· Qawwali Β· Pushkar Sacred Ghats
In 1192 CE, a wandering Sufi mystic from Persia settled in the hills of Rajasthan and changed the spiritual geography of an entire subcontinent. Eight centuries later, his shrine in Ajmer still receives between 150,000 and 400,000 pilgrims every week β Hindu, Muslim, Christian, and everyone in between. The qawwali has not stopped since he died. Come and listen.
Why Ajmer Sharif Is the Most Spiritually Inclusive Place in India
Ajmer's position in the landscape of Indian spirituality is singular. The Dargah Sharif β the shrine of Khwaja Moinuddin Hasan Chishti β is the most visited pilgrimage site in South Asia regardless of faith. On any given Thursday evening, you will find a Rajput family from a Hindu village, a Sufi musician from Pakistan, a French anthropologist, a Bangladeshi businessman, a Sikh couple from Punjab, and an American tourist all sitting in the same courtyard, listening to the same qawwali, moved by the same music. There is nowhere else in India where this is so consistently, so naturally true.
Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti arrived in Ajmer in 1192 CE β the same year Muhammad of Ghor defeated Prithviraj Chauhan and changed the political map of northern India. While armies settled questions by force, the Khwaja settled them by radical compassion: his kitchen fed everyone, his teaching welcomed everyone, his music reached across every boundary. Eight centuries later, his langar still feeds pilgrims β and it has not missed a single day since 1236 CE.
For international travellers, Ajmer offers something rare: the experience of genuine, unperformed spirituality at scale. This is not a heritage site with barriers and interpretive boards. The shrine is alive β breathing, singing, feeding people, receiving prayers at all hours. The combination with Pushkar's sacred lake 15 km away β Hindu devotion in its most ancient form β makes this the most profound spiritual circuit in Rajasthan.
Every Hour Here Leaves Something Behind
From qawwali at the inner courtyard to sunrise on the Pushkar ghats β each moment on this tour is irreplaceable.
The Qawwal Bacche β hereditary musicians descended from Amir Khusrau's disciples β have performed here for 700 years. Thursday evening qawwali at the dargah's inner courtyard is one of the most powerful musical experiences available anywhere on earth. View on map β
Thursday EveningsThe central act of the visit β entering the marble inner chamber of Khwaja's tomb with rose petals and chadar, making a personal supplication (dua) at the jali screen. The experience is intimate despite the crowds β the space has a specific silence at its centre. View on map β
Open All HoursThe Pushkar Lake at dawn β priests beginning puja on the marble ghats, the water perfectly still, the surrounding Aravalli hills turning pink. Then the Brahma Temple β one of only two functioning Brahma temples in the world. View on map β
15 km from AjmerBuilt in "two and a half days" according to legend β actually constructed rapidly by Qutbuddin Aibak using materials from a Sanskrit college. The calligraphy screens here are considered the finest surviving Ghurid-era stonework in India. Five minutes from the dargah and visited by almost nobody. View on map β
12th CenturyThe ancient fort above Ajmer β one of the oldest hill forts in India, predating Delhi's Qutub complex by five centuries. The views over Ajmer, the Ana Sagar Lake, and the surrounding plains on a clear morning are extraordinary. The fort itself contains a dargah of Sayyid Hussain, a Sufi companion of Khwaja Moinuddin. View on map β
360Β° Ajmer ViewsThe artificial lake built by Anaji Chahamana in 1135 CE, later beautified by Jahangir and Shah Jahan with marble pavilions (baradaris). Evening walks along the embankment β the pavilions lit by the setting sun, the lake mirror-flat β are Ajmer's great secular pleasure. View on map β
Mughal PavilionsDargah Sharif
πΉ Khwaja Moinuddin Hasan Chishti Β· Est. 1236 CE Β· All FaithsThe Dargah Sharif is not a museum or a monument. It is a living institution β one that has been continuously operational since Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti's death in 1236 CE, when his disciples built the first tomb structure over his grave. The Buland Darwaza (great gate) β donated by Mahmud Khilji, Sultan of Malwa, in the 15th century β is among the finest examples of Sultanate-era gate architecture in India. Passing through it, especially at dusk when the lamps are lit, is the moment when Ajmer's atmosphere becomes something you carry for the rest of your life.
The dargah's inner complex contains the Nizam Gate (donated by the Nizam of Hyderabad), the Shahjahani Mosque (built by Shah Jahan in white marble), and the central tomb chamber with its silver door. The deg β giant cooking cauldrons β are the largest in Asia; the larger can feed 4,000 people in a single cooking. The langar has fed pilgrims every day without exception since the 13th century.
Arrive before 6 AM for the morning prayers (Fajr time) when the courtyard is quietest and the qawwali most intimate. Buy a chadar (cloth offering) and rose garland from the bazaar outside β βΉ50β200. Our guide will ensure you enter with full knowledge of what each space means, what is happening at each moment, and how to be present without being intrusive. The experience entirely transforms with genuine context.
Inside the tomb chamber, to the left of the silver door, is a carved stone jali screen older than the current building β believed to be from the original 13th century structure. Almost no visitors notice it; everyone looks forward. The stone is worn perfectly smooth at chest height by 800 years of hands touching it in supplication. The texture of that stone under your fingers is the most direct physical connection to the shrine's entire history. Our guide will take you to it specifically.
The Qawwali
π΅ Chishti Sama Β· Hereditary Qawwal Bacche Β· Since 1236 CEQawwali was not merely music β it was a technology of spiritual transformation developed by the Chishti Sufi order as a form of sama (sacred listening). Amir Khusrau β the 13th century polymath, poet, and Sufi master β composed the first formal qawwali texts specifically for the Ajmer dargah. The Qawwal Bacche ("children of the qawwals") are hereditary performers who have maintained this tradition in direct lineage since Khusrau's time β over 700 years of one musical tradition, one location, one purpose.
A full qawwali session at the dargah moves through distinct phases: the Hamd (praise of God), the Naat (praise of the Prophet), the Manqabat (praise of the saint), and finally the ecstatic devotional compositions that can last 2β3 hours and carry the room into states of collective wajd (spiritual ecstasy). The musicians read the audience β when they feel the room is ready to go deeper, they go deeper. It is the most interactive sacred music in the world.
Thursday evenings are the most attended and most emotionally intense. Arrive by 7 PM for a good position in the courtyard. The session typically runs 8 PMβ11 PM, occasionally later. Dress modestly, sit quietly, do not photograph performers without permission, and do not speak during the music. It is acceptable and encouraged to sway, close your eyes, or express emotion. The music is specifically designed to move people β do not resist it.
Beyond the main courtyard performances, there is a smaller, invitation-only gathering β the Mehfil-e-Sama β held by specific hereditary families on certain nights during the Urs period. These sessions are intimate (30β50 people), unamplified, and considered by connoisseurs to be the purest surviving form of classical qawwali. Access requires a connection to the dargah committee or a Chishti order guide. We can facilitate this for guests who specifically request it β it is an experience without parallel in Indian music.
Pushkar β The Lotus Lake
πΈ 52 Sacred Ghats Β· India's Only Brahma Temple Β· Ancient BazaarPushkar is 15 km from Ajmer β close enough to do in a day, profound enough to deserve a full one. The lake's origin story: Brahma dropped a lotus flower from the sky, and where it landed, the sacred lake formed. This explains why Brahma's temple is here rather than anywhere else in India β out of 108 temples in the valley, the central Brahma Temple contains his primary murti, the only one of its kind, actively worshipped every morning by priests who have maintained the same ritual for at least 1,000 years.
The 52 ghats surrounding the lake each have a different history and patron β Varaha Ghat (the oldest, associated with Vishnu), Gandhi Ghat (where Mahatma Gandhi's ashes were immersed), Brahma Ghat (where the evening aarti is most spectacular). Sunrise on the ghats β dawn light turning the water pink, priests beginning puja, the bells from the Brahma temple audible across the water β is a scene that photographers have been returning to for 100 years without exhausting it.
Pushkar's main bazaar is overrun by tourist shops during daylight hours. But the old bazaar behind the Brahma Temple, particularly after 7 PM, becomes entirely local β spice sellers, flower garland vendors for the morning puja, chai stalls serving tea in clay cups. The smell of camphor, marigold, and wood smoke in the narrow lanes after dark is specifically what Pushkar smells like before the hotels and rooftop cafes arrived. Our guide knows which turning to take.
Ana Sagar & Taragarh
π 1135 CE Β· Mughal Baradaris Β· Taragarh Fort Β· 7th CenturyAna Sagar Lake was built by the Chahamana ruler Anaji in 1135 CE β 56 years before Khwaja Moinuddin arrived in Ajmer. The Mughals fell deeply in love with it. Jahangir built the Daulat Bagh gardens on the embankment; Shah Jahan added five marble baradaris (open pavilions). Akbar visited Ajmer 14 times, always staying near this lake. There is something about the combination of the Aravalli hills, the broad water, and the desert light that made Ajmer a preferred retreat for Mughal emperors β more so than Delhi, more so than Agra in summer.
Above the lake and the entire city, on the highest ridge of the Aravalli, stands Taragarh Fort β the star fort, built in the 7th century by the Chahamana Rajputs, making it one of the oldest surviving hill forts in Asia. The British considered it the most strategically commanding position in Rajasthan. The fort also contains the dargah of Sayyid Hussain, a companion of Khwaja Moinuddin β so even the fort has a Sufi dimension, connecting the two spiritual traditions that define Ajmer's identity.
The 45 minutes before sunset: the marble baradaris turn amber-gold, the water reflects the Aravalli hills, and the light has the warmth that makes marble photography extraordinary. Position yourself on the southern embankment for the western light on the pavilions. Early morning also works beautifully β the lake is often mist-covered until 8 AM.
Food That Feeds the Body and the Soul
Ajmer's food reflects its position at the crossroads of Rajputana and Sufi culture β spare, generous, and deeply flavoured.
The langar at the dargah β the communal meal served free to all pilgrims β has been operating continuously since Khwaja Moinuddin's lifetime. Today it serves thousands of people daily from two enormous deg (cauldrons): the smaller for ordinary days and the larger (capable of cooking a full ox) for Urs festivals. The food is simple: rice, dal, and bread. What it represents is not simple at all. Eating from the langar is considered an act of spiritual participation β you are sharing a meal with every person who has done the same in 800 years.
Sohan Halwa is Ajmer's signature confection β a dense, fudge-like sweet made from wheat, ghee, sugar, and dry fruits that is specific to Ajmer in the way that Agra's petha or Mathura's peda are specific to those cities. The best sohan halwa comes from the old family shops in the dargah bazaar, particularly from shops that have been operating in the same spot for 3β4 generations. The texture is dense and grainy, the flavour deeply caramel-rich. Buy it fresh and eat it warm. The tin-box versions sold at highway shops are not the same product.
Sheermal is a saffron-laced flatbread β slightly sweet, fragrant, baked in a tandoor β that accompanied Mughal court meals and filtered into Sufi dargah culture as a special bread for festival mornings. Paired with nihari (slow-cooked meat stew that simmers overnight on dying embers), it is one of India's most historically specific breakfasts. The Ajmer old city has several Muslim-owned establishments that serve this combination at dawn, specifically for pilgrims who have been at the dargah through the night. Our guide knows which ones use original recipes.
Pushkar is entirely vegetarian β no meat, no eggs, and by local convention no alcohol either, respecting the sacred lake's environment. The Pushkar thali, served at the town's traditional family-run restaurants, is sattvic (pure) Rajasthani food: missi roti (flour and chickpea flatbread), gatte ki sabzi (chickpea dumplings in spiced yoghurt), dal baati, and a rotating selection of seasonal vegetables. It is food designed to feel light after the heaviness of pilgrimage β clean, spiced gently, made with ghee that is specifically of temple quality. The contrast with Ajmer's Mughal-influenced meat dishes, 15 km away, is striking and entirely intentional by geography.
The chai sold in the narrow lanes of the dargah bazaar β specifically from the old stalls that have been at the same spot for generations β is made with real saffron (local Rajasthani saffron is different from Kashmiri, more grassy and earthy), cardamom, and full-cream milk from local dairies. It arrives in small clay cups (kulhad) that impart an earthy flavour no ceramic or glass can replicate. The ritual of drinking chai here β standing at the counter in the pre-dawn cold, the dargah music audible from the courtyard around the corner β is one of those travel experiences that becomes a lasting sensory memory.
Malpua is a deep-fried pancake sweet β made from flour, milk, fennel, and cardamom, fried in ghee until golden, then soaked in sugar syrup and served with rabri (thickened, slow-reduced cream). During the Urs festival period, the sweet shops around the dargah work through the night to meet demand β the smell of frying malpua and boiling sugar is inseparable from the festival atmosphere. The best versions are served hot from the pan with rabri that is cold and thick β the temperature contrast is essential. This dish is specifically Ajmer's β it exists in other cities but belongs here.
Stories the Shrine Still Carries
In 1568, Emperor Akbar made a vow: if his son Salim (later Jahangir) was born healthy, he would walk barefoot from Agra to Ajmer to offer thanks at the dargah β a distance of approximately 360 km through desert and rough terrain. The prince was born healthy. Akbar walked the entire distance. The journey took 19 days. He visited Ajmer at least 14 times during his reign, staying for extended periods, participating in the qawwali sessions, and funding the dargah's expansion substantially. His devotion to Khwaja Moinuddin was so complete that contemporary European visitors to his court reported that Akbar seemed more Sufi than Sunni. The barefoot walk is still commemorated in the shrine's official history, and the route Akbar walked has been partially mapped by historians.
Amir Khusrau (1253β1325) β court poet, musician, soldier, inventor of the tabla and sitar in their early forms, and the first writer to use Hindi/Urdu in poetry β was the spiritual heir of Nizamuddin Auliya in Delhi but composed qawwali texts specifically for Ajmer. His compositions β particularly "Man Kunto Maula" and "Aayi Khusrau Ameer Ki" β are still performed at the dargah every Thursday. Khusrau invented a specific musical form called khayal at the same period, which became the foundation of classical Hindustani music. The modern tradition of Bollywood music β and through it, much of popular music across South Asia β descends in a direct line from Khusrau's work in the courtyards of Ajmer and Delhi. When you hear qawwali at the dargah, you are hearing the root of India's entire popular music tradition.
The Adhai Din Ka Jhonpra β built in the 1190s β is constructed almost entirely from materials taken from a Sanskrit college (possibly a Hindu temple complex) that previously stood on the site. Its columns are clearly of earlier Hindu and Jain origin: you can see carvings of Hindu gods (mostly defaced, some complete) incorporated into the mosque's prayer hall pillars. This architectural palimpsest β one tradition built over another's physical structure β is uncomfortable history but extraordinarily valuable for understanding how the period actually worked. Most guides skip past this in favour of the mosque's undeniable architectural beauty. Our guides address it directly, with the respect and context it deserves.
Among the many donors who funded sections of the Ajmer dargah complex, one stands out for the improbability of his faith: a Goan Christian merchant, Jose Fernandes, is recorded in the dargah's internal history as having funded repairs to one of the secondary gates in the 18th century. The document records his name, his city of origin, and his faith. This is not unusual within the logic of the Chishti dargah β Khwaja Moinuddin's teaching specifically welcomed all faiths as spiritually equal β but it is the kind of specific historical detail that makes Ajmer's inclusivity more than a platitude. It always was this. It still is. This is not a recent development for tourism purposes.
The Puranic story explaining why Brahma's temple exists only in Pushkar involves a cosmic quarrel: Brahma was supposed to perform a yajna (sacred fire ritual) with his wife Saraswati, but she was late arriving. Unable to delay the auspicious moment, Brahma married a local shepherd girl (Gayatri) to complete the ceremony. When Saraswati arrived and saw what had happened, she cursed Brahma to never be worshipped by temples anywhere on earth except Pushkar, where the yajna had been performed. This is why Brahma β the creator god, theoretically the most important deity β has no temple anywhere in India except this single exception. The curse of a wife over an act of impatience is the reason for one of India's most theologically unusual geographic facts.
When Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti arrived in Ajmer from Persia, he spoke Farsi and Arabic. The local people spoke Rajasthani dialects and early Hindi. Rather than requiring his followers to learn his language, he learned theirs β and then did something extraordinary: he began composing poetry and prayer in a new hybrid language that mixed Farsi, Arabic, and early Hindi/Rajasthani vocabulary, creating one of the earliest precursors of Urdu. This language β sometimes called Hindawi β became the literary tongue of the entire Chishti Sufi order and is directly ancestral to modern Urdu. Pakistan's national language, the language of Bollywood's most beloved songs, the language of the Mughal court poets β all of it traces back, in part, to a Persian mystic sitting in the Aravalli hills, trying to find words that everyone could understand.
Four Days in Sacred Rajasthan
Sample programme β customised based on whether your visit falls on a Thursday, during the Urs, or during the Pushkar Camel Fair.
Everything Taken Care Of πΉ
You focus on what you came for. We handle every detail, protocol, and timing.
In Their Own Words πΉ
"I am not religious β I have never been inside a church or mosque voluntarily in my adult life. I came to Ajmer because a friend who is a musicologist told me to. The Thursday qawwali at the dargah inner courtyard lasted three hours. By the end, there were tears on my face. I don't know what happened. The guide explained it the next morning: this music was specifically designed to reach people who are not otherwise reachable by words. I believe him now. This is a genuinely extraordinary place regardless of faith."
"As a Muslim visiting from the UK, Ajmer had been on my list for 20 years. What I didn't expect was how the Sanoli guide's knowledge deepened everything: he knew the specific history of the Nizam Gate, the specific qawwal family performing that evening, and the specific calligraphy verse on the Buland Darwaza that most people miss. He took me to the ancient jali screen inside the tomb chamber that I had never read about in any book. Ajmer with this level of guidance is a completely different experience from going with a generic operator."
"We combined Ajmer with Pushkar and Jaipur. Pushkar sunrise was the single most beautiful morning of our India trip β the light on the ghats, the puja, the lake. But the unexpected highlight was the Nasiyan Jain Temple in Ajmer town: a three-storey golden cosmological model of the Jain universe that I had never read about anywhere and that was the most extraordinary thing I saw in three weeks in India. I would not have found it without Sanoli. This is precisely what having a knowledgeable operator means."
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