Shirdi Tourism, Maharashtra India
(Shirdi is also known as Sirdi)
Shirdi Tourism, Tourist places in Shirdi, Sightseeing, Shirdi Travel Guide, Holiday Packages, weekend getaways, places near Shirdi, reviews, map and trips
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Shirdi Fast Facts
- State: Maharashtra
- District: Ahmednagar
- Famous for/as: Pilgrim
- Altitude: 504 m
- Language: Marathi, Hindi, English
- Best Season: June - March
- Weather: Summer 20 to 40°C, Winter 8 to 34°C
- Clothing:
- Local Transport:
- Pincode: 423109
- STDCode: 02423
Shirdi Info
Shri Sai Baba Sansthan,
Shridi, Taluka - Kopargaon,
Dist. Ahmednagar,
Tel: 258500.
Maharashtra Tourism Dev. Corpn. Ltd. (MTDC),
T/1, Golf Club, Nashik,
Tel: 2570059.
MTDC, CDO Hutments, Madam Cama Road, Mumbai. Tel: 22845678
Shirdi, India Overview
Shirdi is a town and falls under the jurisdiction of municipal council popularly known as Shirdi Nagar Panchayat, located in Rahata Tehasil in Ahmednagar District in the Indian state of Maharashtra. It is accessible via the Ahmednagar - Manmad State Highway No.10, approximately 83 km from Ahmednagar and 15 km from Kopargaon. It is located 185 km east of the Western Seashore line (the Ahmednagar - Manmad road), which is a very busy route. Shirdi is best known as the late 19th century home of the popular guru Shirdi Sai Baba. It is one of the richest temple organisations.
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Must See Places in Shirdi, India
Shirdi, India History
Long time ago, at the beginning of eighteenth century a young bearded man ( Shirdi Sai baba) with sparkling eyes took shelter in a mosque, in Shirdi Village (of Maharshtra State, In India) . Nobody knew from where this stranger had come who hardly spoke a word and stayed there.
Gradually the curious villagers started offering food to the man, but he never asked anything from them. Sometimes he shared his food with the animals. Soon the young fakir, as he was started to be addressed, started expressing his view points with few elderly villagers. His simple language of expresssion and his special power of solving the problems of poor needy and destitutes soon made this less known fakir, to be known as Shri Sai Baba. As the days passed, devotees started streaming into Shirdi in ever growing numbers. The village was fast becoming a centre of pilgrimage. As gifts and presentations flowed in, the pomp and ceremony of Sai worship were evolving. Everyday Sai Baba would be a pauper having distributed all among the needy and the poor. But Sai Baba's life of a Fakir remained calm, undisturbed, unaltered and therein is the saint's Spiritual glory.
People also realised that this "Baba" was no ordinary person but a person with extraordinary godly powers. Such powers are not known or present in normal human beings. Baba preached his principle of love and faith in humanity to all his disciples. He always felt anguished over the fact that all those who came to him were more for their own personal problems and not for attaining the ultimate goal of reaching God which he felt could be attained only by true servicing of humanity.
Sai baba strongly believed in uniformity of religion and he never distinguished anyone on the basis of caste, creed or religion. He always made it a point not to return empty handed those who had come to him in their hour of need and grief. He performed miracles to alleviate the suffering of poor people. On one occasion he restored the eyes of a blind elderly and on another occasion he lighted a lantern with water when there was no oil to burn it.