Just a few months ago, water stood chest-deep there. Boats had to be rowed across what were once fields. Farmers’ eyes held nothing but helplessness and darkness. Today, on that very same land, wheat crops sway in lush green waves. This is not a story of miracles — it is the story of selfless service that breathed hope back into an entire village.
- When 400 Bigha of Land Drowned
- Filed Petitions with the Government, Got Nothing
- A Daughter’s Research and a New Way of Thinking
- When Help Arrived — The Beginning of Real Change
- Not Just Supplies — A Promise
- Two Months Later — Green as Far as the Eye Can See
- Every Farmer’s Lips Carry One Name
- Social Impact — Not the Story of One Village, but of Hundreds of Families
- The Story That Is Not Just of Relief, But of Inspiration
- Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj: When a Saint Became the Farmer’s Support
- The Hope That Now Sways in the Fields
Khedi Sampla, a village in Sampla tehsil of Rohtak district — this name has now joined the list of villages in Haryana that were devastated by floods, yet rose again with the help of one of their own. And that “own person” was no politician, no government officer — it was Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj and His devoted servants.
When 400 Bigha of Land Drowned
This is the story of those days when rain had submerged Khedi Sampla entirely. Elder villager Dharmavir Ji recalls that the situation was so dire that their entire 400 bigha of land lay underwater — chest-deep water, meaning water reaching up to where a person stands. In such conditions, there was no hope for farming, no way to run households.
Farmer Pawan Kumar shares that there was not even fodder left for the animals. Jowar and bajra crops had rotted away. The paddy crop was completely destroyed. A farmer who kept a buffalo had nothing left to feed her. The man who once fed his family was himself sitting hungry.

Farmer Rohit said that at least 400 to 500 acres were submerged. Not a single field was fit for sowing. The situation was such that if nothing had been done, every farmer in the village would have drowned in debt.
This was not even a new problem. Villagers say that this cycle has continued since 2021. For four consecutive years, rains come and fields flood. The area is near an industrial zone where dirty water accumulates with no outlet.
Filed Petitions with the Government, Got Nothing
When the water rose, farmers first knocked on the government’s door. They went to the district administration, climbed the steps of the SDM’s office, visited the DC’s office — but everywhere they received the same answer: “We don’t have the resources.” They applied for a connection and it got cancelled. They applied again and that too took many days.
Farmer Ashok said, “We went to the government too, but the government provided no help. When we learned that Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj was helping people, we went there — and He listened to us.”
One elderly farmer said it plainly — “The DC doesn’t listen quickly, the CM doesn’t listen — but He arranged help within three or four days.”
A Daughter’s Research and a New Way of Thinking
A unique turn in this entire story is brought by Anjali, a 12th-grade student. When Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj’s convoy arrived in the village, Anjali picked up the microphone and said — “Today’s age is the age of science, and science wants proof.”
She explained that when she researched herself — on the internet, in newspapers, by talking to people — she found that only Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj is someone who works at the ground level. Everyone else makes promises, but when it comes to actually doing something, they step back.
This thought was not just of one girl — it is the thinking of an entire generation that now judges leaders and social workers not by words, but by deeds.
When Help Arrived — The Beginning of Real Change
When the farmers of Khedi Sampla filed a request at Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj’s ashram, their appeal was accepted and within just a few days, help reached the village.
In the first phase, 5,000 feet of pipe and a powerful motor were sent on behalf of Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj. But when the water did not drain completely, a second convoy arrived — this time with 6,000 more feet of pipe and another 20 horsepower motor.

In total, the village received:
- 11,000 feet of pipe
- Two 20-horsepower powerful motors
- And the assurance — that the service would continue until the work was complete
Farmer Pawan Kumar says that as soon as the motors and pipes were installed, water began draining out. The machines ran day and night, and the stubborn water that had been pressing the land down for months finally came out.
Not Just Supplies — A Promise
One special aspect of this help was that it was not limited to merely sending materials. The nuts, bolts, pipes, and motors were delivered directly to the farmers’ homes. No one had to go and collect anything themselves. All the fitting materials were also sent along. Even all the lubrication materials were provided by His side.
One farmer said emotionally — “Where will you find such a saint? No one says go and take it from here. He gave it and delivered it right to our doorstep.”
This is not a small thing. A person who was in trouble was not made to wander — help was brought to their door. That is the difference between real service and service for show.
Two Months Later — Green as Far as the Eye Can See
Today, when reporters reached those very fields of Khedi Sampla that were once submerged, the sight was enough to lift the heart. As far as the eye could see — nothing but greenery. Wheat plants have emerged from the soil; some fields have even been irrigated once already.
On nearly 100% of the approximately 400 bigha of land, wheat has been sown. Only five to seven bigha remain where soil is being lifted, as it is near a pond and still marshy. Dharmavir Ji says — “Where boats sailed yesterday, wheat sways today. This is the grace of Rampal Ji Maharaj.”
Every Farmer’s Lips Carry One Name
When reporters spoke to different farmers across the village, one name was on every tongue — Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj. Pawan Kumar says — “Maharaj Ji is like God in a sense. He is helping farmers of all 36 communities.” Rohit says — “A first-rate atmosphere has been created. The crop is growing well. Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj has done a wonderful job.”
Ashok said — “The farmer was dead, in a sense. If Rampal Maharaj Ji had not come, absolutely nothing would have happened here. He sowed us back into life — He is equal to God for us.”
One elderly farmer went so far as to say — “He is not Prajaapal (caretaker of subjects) — He is Jeevapal (caretaker of all living beings). Humans take care of humans, but He takes care of all creatures too.”
Social Impact — Not the Story of One Village, but of Hundreds of Families
The sowing of wheat on 400 bigha of land does not simply mean the fields have turned green. It means hundreds of families will receive grain this year. Money will come for children’s education. The buffalo will get fodder. The house will be repaired. Wedding expenses can be met.
One farmer summed it up simply, “We will meet our own expenses, build our own homes, celebrate weddings. Where would we have gotten it all from? Now we will take it from our own fields.”
This is what happens when someone’s land comes back to life, the entire family comes back to life.
And there is another aspect of this help that the farmers themselves mentioned — the motors and pipes that were received will be kept permanently in the village. They will be buried in the ground to create a permanent drainage system so that the next time floods come, the village can face them on its own.
The Story That Is Not Just of Relief, But of Inspiration
The story of Khedi Sampla raises a great question and also provides a great answer.
The question is — when the administration, government, and system could not help the farmer, how did such a large task get completed in just a few days at the word of one saint? The answer is — willpower, sensitivity, and selfless service.
What 12th-grade student Anjali said is the most important thing of our times — “Look at the truth. Do not hold on to falsehood. Do not look with closed eyes at what is visible.” Examine the work being done. Feel the service that is evident.
What Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj and His servants did was not merely sending motors and pipes. They gave a broken farmer the assurance that you are not alone. They gave a devastated village the hope that there is a way forward. The wheat growing in the fields of Khedi Sampla today is not just a crop. It is the hope of farmers who had broken down. It is the future of children whose homes had no grain. It is the fodder of animals that were hungry. And it is the self-respect of an entire village that had grown weary of government and bureaucracy.
The names that the people of Khedi Sampla have given Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj — Annadaata (provider of food), Jeevapal (caretaker of all life), Prajaapal (caretaker of people) — these are not merely words. These are words that rose from the heart of a person whose land came back to life, whose family stood back on its feet.
The story of Khedi Sampla reminds us that real service is that which happens without fanfare, without self-interest — and does not stop until the work is done.
Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj: When a Saint Became the Farmer’s Support
What leaves the deepest impression in this entire story is that when the government machinery grew tired and the farmer had broken — a saint extended His hand of service. Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj placed no conditions, demanded no promises — He simply saw who was in trouble and delivered help.
This is the true mark of a saint — service that happens without proclamation, without delay, and does not stop until the task is complete. Villagers say that Sant Rampal Ji is like God — first, because of His exemplary work; second, because He works for the benefit of all 36 communities. Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj is giving someone healthcare, giving someone a home, draining water from someone’s fields, building homes for someone, providing food to someone — and all of this without any expectation of anything in return.
The Hope That Now Sways in the Fields
Khedi Sampla has today become an example. This village is living proof that if intention is pure and service is selfless, a way out of even the greatest crisis emerges.
In this entire story, the name of Sant Rampal Ji Maharaj did not shine because He gave a speech, it shone because He worked. Where files remained stuck, He sent motors and pipes. Where officers turned their faces away, he opened the door. His service is not merely the story of one village — it is proof that the compassion of a true saint can rebuild devastated homes, make barren land green again, and help a broken person stand tall once more.

