Dara Shikoh, the eldest son of Shah…
August 1657 CE
Dara Shikoh, the eldest son of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal, is an erudite champion of mystical religious speculation and a poetic diviner of syncretic cultural interaction among people of all faiths.
This makes him a heretic in the eyes of his orthodox younger brother Aurangzeb and a suspect eccentric in the view of many of the worldly power brokers swarming around the Mughal throne.
Dara is a follower of Lahore's famous Qadiri Sufi saint Hazrat Mian Mir, to whom he had been introduced by Mullah Shah Badakhshi, Mian Mir's spiritual disciple and successor), and who had been so widely respected among all communities that he had been invited to lay the foundation stone of the Golden Temple in Amritsar by the Sikhs.
Dara had subsequently developed a friendship with the seventh Sikh Guru, Guru Har Rai.
Dara has devoted much effort towards finding a common mystical language between Islam and Hinduism.
Towards this goal, he completes the translation of fifty Upanishads from its original Sanskrit into Persian in 1657 so it can be read by Muslim scholars.
His translation is often called Sirr-e-Akbar (The Greatest Mystery), where he states boldly, in the Introduction, his speculative hypothesis that the work referred to in the Qur'an as the Kitab al-maknun or the hidden book.
is none other than the Upanishads.
His most famous work, Majma-ul-Bahrain ("The Mingling of the Two Seas"), is also devoted to a revelation of the mystical and pluralistic affinities between Sufic and Vedantic speculation.