Akka Mahadevi
Akka Mahadevi
Brahmananda
Brahmananda
Dadu Dayal
Dadu Dayal
Eknath
Eknath
Guru Nanak
Guru Nanak
Jnaneshvar
Jnaneshvar
Kabir
Kabir
Lalleshwari
Lalleshwari
Mirabai
Mirabai
Namdev
Namdev
Raidas
Raidas
Sahajo Bai
Sahajo Bai
Shankaracharya
Shankaracharya
Shivadina
Shivadina
Sunderdas
Sunderdas
Surdas
Surdas
Tukaram
Tukaram
Tulsidas
Tulsidas

Sahajo Bai

Sahajo Bai (c 1725) lived in Delhi and from the age of eleven served her Guru. The word sahaja connotes “the essence of simplicity,” and this virtue permeates Sahajo Bai’s life and work.

By age eighteen, Sahajo Bai had composed her master-work, Sahaj Prakash, a collection of eighty-five songs, many of them couplets called dohas. Throughout her life, Sahajo Bai proclaimed the value of devotional chanting, advising seekers to immerse themselves in love for the Lord by chanting the divine name.  She spoke of the body as a vehicle for attaining God, and she followed this view with zeal, meditating often on the inner sound, chanting the mantra So’ham at regular intervals throughout day and night, and studying sacred texts.

A Doha by Sahajo Bai