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Sadhu Sundar Singh

Sadhu Sundar Singh (1889–1929). Born on September 3, 1889, in Rampur, Punjab, India, to a wealthy Sikh family, Sundar Singh was a Christian mystic and evangelist whose itinerant ministry left a profound mark on Indian Christianity. Raised in a devout Sikh household, his mother immersed him in the Guru Granth Sahib and Hindu scriptures, but he encountered Christianity through a Presbyterian mission school. At 15, enraged by missionary teachings, he publicly burned a Bible, yet a vision of Jesus Christ in 1905 led to his dramatic conversion at 16, prompting his family to disown him and attempt to poison him. Adopting the life of a sadhu—a holy wanderer—he wore saffron robes and traveled barefoot across northern India, Tibet, and Nepal, preaching the Gospel in simple, parable-like sermons that resonated with villagers. By 1918, he evangelized globally, speaking in Europe, America, and Australia, emphasizing personal experience with Christ over doctrinal debate. He authored eight books, including At the Master’s Feet (1922), Visions of the Spiritual World (1926), and With and Without Christ (1929), blending Eastern mysticism with biblical faith. Unmarried, he vanished in 1929 during a trek to Tibet, likely dying in the Himalayas, though his fate remains unconfirmed. Singh said, “From my own experience, I know that the cross of Christ is at the center of God’s heart.”