This website didn’t come from any grand plan. It just sort of happened, one thing led to another.
It all began with a friend — let’s call him V — whose love for saints runs so deep, it feels less like admiration and more like belonging. He once told me something Neem Karoli Baba said: “Jo laqeer nahi karti, woh fakir karta hai.” What destiny cannot do, a saint can. For V, saints aren’t messengers or middlemen; they’re living proof of the mercy and love we rarely see directly from God. Their compassion isn’t a trade — it just flows, because that’s who they are.
During a call with V, I realized I felt the same way. Maybe it’s through saints that we truly come to know God — not as a distant idea, but as something palpable, warm, and quietly guiding us.
Since then, I’ve met people whose lives have shifted in quiet, almost invisible ways through this grace. For them, their guru or saint remains as present as ever, even after leaving the body. Their stories and faith remind me what love and surrender really mean — and how an unseen thread seems to tie us all together.
This website is a small attempt to gather those stories — of saints, mystics, avadhootas, rasiks, and seekers — and keep them in one place. A sanctuary where love for these beings can be remembered, shared, and maybe even kept alive online, amidst the noise of our times.
If you’ve known or loved a saint, or carry a story you’ve never shared, I’d love to hear from you.
Write to me at arjungoel@saintsofindia.com
I’ll be grateful to listen — to your journey, and to the divine love that still moves through these beings who never really leave us, always here, always showering their ahaituka kripa, i.e their causeless grace.