A Baba Sargaban -
In the biting cold of winter, he would produce warming treats like Gur (jaggery) brittle mixed with peanuts and sesame seeds, foods designed to provide heat and energy to the body. He understood the Ayurvedic or Unani principles of food as medicine.
When a family needed to mark a joyous occasion, they turned to the Sargaban. He was the one who could supply kilos of Rewari , Gajak , or Batasha on short notice. There was a trust involved; you knew his sweets were made with pure ghee and quality sugar, not the adulterated substitutes of the mass market. A Baba Sargaban
It must be noted that orthodox religious scholars have historically dismissed the veneration of as Bid'at (innovation) or folk Islam. They argue that there is no written chain of transmission ( sanad ) linking him to any major Sufi order. In the biting cold of winter, he would
Devotees of A Baba Sargaban do not follow the typical pattern of Sama (ecstatic music) or Qawwali . Their devotion is uniquely austere. He was the one who could supply kilos
Unlike the marble domes of Data Darbar or the grandeur of Sehwan Sharif, the shrine of is notoriously humble. The primary shrine is located in a small village near Kot Addu (Punjab, Pakistan), nestled between sugarcane fields and grazing lands.