Career
Adi is said to have been born in the village of Bait Far, near Baalbek, where the house of his birth was - and still is - a place of pious pilgrimage. Shaykh ‘Adī spent much of his early life in Baghdad. Despite his desire for seclusion, he impressed the local population with his asceticism and miracles.
Adi was said to be very tanned and of middle stature.
Adi was celebrated on account of his saintly life. He founded a religious order named after himself, al-Adawiya.
He resided in the mountains, alongside Hakkari Kurds in the region north of Mosul;and died at the age of 90 (1162 Civil Engineering or 557 Hijra). According to others, he died in 1160 Civil Engineering (555 Hijra) in the hermitage that he had built himself in the mountains, where his descendants lived after his demise.
His sepulchre is indicated by three conical cupolas in the environs of the village of Baadri, 20 miles to the east of the Nestorian convent of Rabban-Hormuzd.
His tomb still attracts a great number of people. Nightly processions by torch light include exhibitions of the green colored pall, which covers the tomb. And the distribution of large trays with smoking harisa (a ragout with coagulated milk) compose the ceremony.
His followers believed that he was the incarnation of the divinity.