Rauza Sharif or Shaikh Ahmad al-Faruq? al-Sirhind? Dargah (popularly known as Mujaddid, Alf-Sani) is on the Sirhind-Bassi Pathana Road at a small distance to the north of Gurdwara Fatehgarh Sahib. Sheikh Ahmed Farooqi lived at this place during the times of Akbar and Jahangir from 1563 to 1624. Attended by people from India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and other countries, the Urs celebration (death anniversary) of the Mujadid takes place for more than 300 years. There are several other tombs in the compound, mostly of the members of Shaikh Ahmad's house. The mausoleum is a fine building made of bricks partly overlaid with stone and marble. Close to it there is the mausoleum of Rati-ud-Din, an ancestor of the Mujadid. Not far here are the rauzas of Mujaddid's sons Khawaja Muhammad Sadiq and Khwaja Muhammad Masum. The rauza of the latter is sometimes called rauza chini on account of its excellent mosaic work. There is a grand mosque with a basement and a small tank for performing ablution before the prayers. The government of India administers the shrine as a historic monument, and regular employees have been kept here for its maintenance, upkeep, and care. By the side of the Rauza are the tombs of the Afghan Ruler, Shah Zaman, and his Queen.