Srinagar, June 11 -- You can't talk about Kashmir without talking about Hazrat Ameer Kabir. People say his name with a kind of softness, like they're remembering an old warmth.
Even now, six centuries later, his memory is stitched into the fabric of the valley. It's spoken in homes, echoed in mosques, felt in the curves of calligraphy on ancient shrines.
He was born in Hamadan, a city in what we now call Iran, sometime in the early 1300s. His full name was Mir Syed Ali Hamadani. But in Kashmir, most just call him "Shah-e-Hamadan", the King of Hamadan.
He wasn't a king in the usual sense. He didn't wear a crown or rule a palace. But he ruled hearts. And that's the kind of power that lasts.
As a child, he came from a family of scholars ...
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