Jai Shahenshah Baba

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No. 7, 9th Street, Dr. Radhakrishnan Road, Mylapore, Chennai - 600 004.

 

Puj Shahenshah Baba keeps showering his blessings upon all those who come to him seeking solutions to their problems. He also keeps alleviating their miseries and guiding them through his chosen disciple, Pujniya Dada Ratanchandji. As one enters the Sufi Dar, one is overwhelmed by the atmosphere of sanctity that prevails there. Pictures of several Sufi saints, Hindu saints and mystics, Jesus Christ and Mother Mary, Guru Nanak and other Sikh gurus, religious leaders of Radhaswami and Chidakashi sects and Sai Baba adorn the walls of Sufi Dar. Marble statues of Lord Ganesh, Laxmi Narayan, Shiva Parvati, Radha Krishna, Lord Ram, Sita, Laxman, Hanuman, Durga Mata and Jhulelal Sain are tastefully arranged and placed there. Every visitor, irrespective of his faith, is sure to behold his favourite deity and feel at home in Sufi Dar.

Pujniya Dada Ratanchandji came to Madras in August 1961 and established a small temple at 235, Walltax Road. He dedicated it to Puj Shahenshah Baba Nebharaj Sahib. At first, thirty to forty devotees used to join in fellowship gatherings .They used to receive the blessings of both Puj Shahenshah Baba and Dadaji. As the congregation went on growing day by day, Dadaji shifted the temple to its present site at No.7, 9th Street, Dr.Radhakrishnan Road, Mylapore, Madras  600004. Even as the fame of the Sufi Dar spread, the congregation increased. The temple was first located on the first floor of a bungalow which was purchased by Shri Bhagwandas (Bhagi) Mirani of Manila, Phillipines, in the name of his beloved wife Smt.Kamla B.Mirani. The Sufi Dar Trust was formed with Pujniya Dada Ratanchandji as the Chairman /Life Trustee. Other member trustees were from Madras, Hong Kong and Manila. With the passage of time people kept coming in large numbers. Alterations were accordingly made in three stages. The present edifice, equipped as it is with all modern facilities, was designed by Shri S. L. Chitale, a leading architect of South India. Though a non-Sindhi, he is greatly attached to Dadaji and offers his services on an honorary basis. Even to this day he continues to come to the Sufi Dar to have darshan every Monday. His spirit of devotion and declaration, far from lagging behind, keeps growing from more to more he attends even to the minutest of problems as they keep arising .

The main hall can now accommodate one thousand devotees. There is a separate room for meditation. It is dedicated to "Peeran-de-Peer" Dada Dastagir Badshah of Baghdad, known more popularly among the Sindhis as "Yaari Wara Peer". His portrait as well as the portraits of other Sufi saints, their "Dargahs" and "Mazhars" conduce to the sanctity of the meditation room. Guest-rooms are provided on the ground floor and on the second floor, one reserved for the distribution of prasad and the other for guests and volunteers. There is, in addition, a spacious mediation hall on the second floor where every year hawan is performed during the Navaratri days. Along with regular programmes of worship, the programmes of service too are carried on. Worship of deities is coupled with service of the needy and the helpless. Love of God and love of neighbour go hand in hand.

Dadaji's compassion is not restricted only to human beings. It exceeds these limits and goes out to the dumb, defenceless creatures, to birds and beasts, who in His sight are also the children of god. Feeding these dumb creatures and seeking their blessings form a regular part of the programme of the Sufi Dar. May Dadaji enjoy a long, healthy life and continue to become a source of inspiration to the devotees and to serve them as their friend, philosopher and guide. And may he be granted from more to more insight and strength to lead the erring and the astray, the eager and the aspiring souls onward, forward and God ward along the path of truth and peace, love and light, for God is truth and peace, love and light.

 

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