Tuesday, 24 April 2012

Nirmal Baba Enormous wealth

Enormous wealth of Nirmal Baba:

He advertises on 35 channels and has over 3 lakh followers on Facebook. Add to this, around 42,000 followers on Twitter. On every congregation (darbar) around 5,000 are believed to be present. Each person has to pay Rs 2,000 to be a part of it. This amounts to a staggering figure of around Rs 1 crore from every darbar he organizes. It is believed that around 7 such darbars are conducted every month which takes the stats to Rs 84 crores per year. This not the end to it.
He also gives group appointments, conducts pujas, takes donations etc. 



for more detail go to 
Nirmal Baba History
 

Wednesday, 18 April 2012

Nirmal Baba Lives in a posh colony in the capital:

Nirmal Baba History:

He apparently owns a huge home in New Delhi. It is said that this man has the healing powers and has the ability to scan the individual who is hundreds of kilometers away – believe it or not, over the telephone! Isn’t it strange? Even his family is tight lipped about how he transformed from a business man into a wealthy big spiritual guru.



Nirmal Baba History

Monday, 16 April 2012

Nirmal Baba’s past life

He was born around 1950 in a Sikh family. Baba got married to the daughter of Dilip Singh Bagga in Jharkhand and has two children (son & daughter). Nirmal Baba is the brother-in-law of former speaker of Jharkhand Legislative Assembly, Inder Singh Namdharee. According to Namdhari, he married Baba’s sister in 1964 when Nirmal was only 14-15 years old. After the murder of his father during his childhood, his mother sent him to Daltonganj, Jharkhand in 1970’s. According to our investigations, Nirmal Baba during the seventies, owned a cloth shop and after a few years he shut the shop. Later on he tried his luck in the bricks business and laid the foundation of 'Nirmal Bricks' but failed here as well.  In early 1980’s he disappeared and went to Delhi. People knowing him in Jharkhand say he acquired divine powers during this period and developed an inclination towards spiritualism.

Saturday, 14 April 2012

Nirmal Baba exposed as a fraud?

 Nirmal Baba exposed as a fraud?
Another controversy involving Godmen, Rs 109 crore was found deposited in Nirmal Baba’s two bank accounts in just three months, according to a report published in Prabhat Khabar a Jharkhand daily on Friday. 
 The report further said that Nirmal Baba asks for 10 percent of the salary from all those who visit him for solutions to their problems. Post this diclosure, Baba’s bank account has come under scanner where transactions are made from all over the country. 

Nirmal Baba charges Rs 2,000 from every participant who wishes to be a part of his commune, 'samagam'. This amount is trasferred directly into Nirmal Baba's three bank acconts — one each in Punjab National Bank, ICICI Bank and Yes Bank. As per estimates Nirmal Darbar has an annual turnover of approximately 84 crore rupees.

Nirmal Baba holds two accounts - one in the name of Nirmaljeet Singh Narula (Nirmal Baba's real name), and the other in the name of 'Nirmal Darbar'.

Sushma Narula, Nirmal Baba's wife, is registered as the nominee. Prabhat Khabar claims that Nirmal Baba transferred Rs 53 crores from one of these accounts into a private bank.

Meanwhile, Nirmal Baba told a news channel, “I never asked people to deposit money to solve their problems. I never assured them of any magical solution to their woes.”

He also added, “Our aim is not to spread superstition but to lessen it and we don’t provide any amulet, talisman or good luck charm to our devotees.”

He said all the allegations against him were baseless and he was ready to undergo a lie-detector test to prove himself right.

He explained, “I have been paying my income tax regularly. My annual turnover is Rupees 235 crore.”

"People consider God’s blessings as magic and they have godly experience at Nirmal darbar. My promises have passed through the litmus test of science", he added.

He also mentioned that he utilizes the money deposited by his devotees only in the expenditure of samagams and advertising. People send money according to their own veneration.