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Babuji was born in the north Indian town of Shahjahanpur,
in Uttar Pradesh, India, on 30 April 1899. He was named Ram
Chandra after one of the great figures of Indian history.
His father was a lawyer and noted scholar who educated his
son extensively in English, Urdu and Persian, perhaps hoping
that he would follow in his father's footsteps. But from an
early age Ram Chandra displayed a craving for spiritual realisation
which overshadowed all other interests.
Ram Chandra became a babu, which in his native tongue designates
a clerk, and it was from this profession that his affectionate
nickname arose, Babuji. The suffix "ji" is an honorific, an
expression of respect often appended to names or titles in
India.
He began his spiritual education on his own, experimenting
with the forms of devotion available in the Hindu religion
and with certain yogic practices such as pranayama (the control
of the breath). In June of 1922, at the comparatively young
age of twenty-three, he first met his Master, a man with the
same name as himself who lived in the town of Fatehgarh, not
far from Shahjahanpur. Ram Chandra of Fatehgarh, affectionately
known as Lalaji, was a saint of the highest calibre. He recognised
Babuji as the man who had appeared to him in a dream years
before, the one who was destined to succeed him as the leader
of the great spiritual renaissance which he, Lalaji, had already
initiated.
Of his spiritual condition Babuji wrote, "There seems to
be uniformity in love. Ties of relationship seem to have been
severed. I have as much respect for my servant as for my respected
father. I have as much love for the sons of other people as
I feel for my own sons. I have as much regard for a dog as
I have for my own person, as if my own existence and that
of a dog are identical. I also consider gold and earth to
be the same. I see the pious and the wicked with one eye."
Following Lalaji's death, Babuji began to use the gift of
transmission, or pranahuti (a yogic technique rediscovered
by Lalaji and passed on to his successor as the basis for
the Sahaj Marg system of raja yoga) all over India. In 1945,
Babuji founded the Shri Ram Chandra Mission in honour of his
Master.
Convinced that God is simple and can be arrived at by simple
means, he began travelling outside of India to bring the method
of the Sahaj Marg (the natural path) to the cultures of Europe
and America in 1972. He was accompanied on these travels by
his attendant and long-time general secretary of the Mission,
Shri Parthasarathi Rajagopalachari of Madras. Parthasarathi,
known by his associates as Chariji, was chosen by Babuji to
be his spiritual representative and to carry on the work he
had started.
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