Salig Ram

Salig Ram
Personal
Born14 March 1829
Died6 December 1898
(aged 69)
ReligionRadha Soami, Hindu
Senior posting
Based inPeepal Mandi, Agra, North-Western Provinces, British India (present-day Agra, Uttar Pradesh, India)
Period in office1878-1898
PredecessorShiv Dayal Singh
SuccessorAjodhya Prasad, Maharaj Sahab (Brahm Shankar Misra), Shivbratlal

Salig Ram, successor of Shiv Dayal Singh[1] second Sant Satguru of the Radhasoami Satsang popularly known by the honorific "Huzur Maharaj" and by the government-conferred title "Rai Bahadur," was born in Peepal Mandi, Agra, on 14 March 1829.[2] He served as chief inspector of post offices in British India, and, in 1881, was Postmaster-General of the North-Western Provinces,[3] based in Allahabad. He was the first Indian to hold the position.

Salig Ram came in contact with his guru, Shiv Dayal Singh, in 1858 in Agra. Salig Ram recognised his guru as the first physical incarnation of the Supreme Being, whom Salig Ram called by the name "Radha Soami." Salig Ram served Shiv Dayal Singh for many years and, after Shiv Dayal Singh's death, Salig Ram retired from his job, and the Radha Soami sect in Agra took up the role of guru. He died on 6 December 1898.

  1. ^ "Radhasoami Satsang". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 4 June 2024.
  2. ^ Devotees who worship Salig Rām as God regard it blasphemous to call him by name. Instead, they use the honorific "Huzur Maharaj" ("Our Great King," similar to the English "My Lord") or the government title "Rai Bahadur" ("Noble Hero").[citation needed]
  3. ^ Frost, Mark R. (29 September 2016). "Pandora's Post Box: Empire and Information in India, 1854–1914". The English Historical Review. 131 (552): 1043–1073. doi:10.1093/ehr/cew270.

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