Have a verified Sevak offer your ardas at Delhi's Gurudwara Bangla Sahib — and receive same-day proof.
Gurudwara Bangla Sahib, near Connaught Place in New Delhi, is one of the most revered Sikh shrines in the capital. It marks the place where the eighth Sikh Guru, Guru Har Krishan, stayed in 1664 and served the sick during a smallpox and cholera epidemic — which is why the water of its sarovar is regarded by devotees as healing.
From before sunrise the Gurudwara echoes with kirtan, and its langar serves free meals to tens of thousands of people every day, regardless of faith. Many devotees wish to have an ardas offered here — for a recovery, an exam result, or a new chapter — but live too far to come in person.
With Sevahey, a verified Sevak offers your ardas at Bangla Sahib on your behalf and sends back proof the same day, so your prayer reaches the Guru's presence even when you cannot.
Your name presented in ardas, with the day's Hukamnama shared back to you.
A contribution to the Gurudwara's langar offered in your name, with video and proof of seva.
* Sevas start from ₹251. A full seva is ₹899 — your final price is always shown in the Sevahey app before you pay.
Temples, mosques, gurudwaras, churches — verified by us, in person.
A real, named person offers your prayer with care.
GPS-tagged photos, a short video, a handwritten note.
A receipt that proves a prayer was real — not a notification that says it happened.
Coordinates and time, embedded in every photo.
30 seconds of the moment it happened.
The chant, recorded on-site.
From the Sevak who served you.
Open the Sevahey app, choose Gurudwara Bangla Sahib in New Delhi, and select a seva. A verified Sevak then offers your ardas at the Gurudwara and sends you same-day proof. You do not need to travel to Delhi yourself.
Sevas at Gurudwara Bangla Sahib start from ₹251 for an Ardas & Hukamnama. A langar seva contribution offered in your name is ₹899. There is no subscription — you pay only for the seva you choose.
After your seva at Bangla Sahib you receive GPS-tagged photos from the Gurudwara, a short video of the offering, audio from the kirtan or ardas, and a handwritten note from the Sevak — usually the same day.
A verified, named Sevak offers your ardas in person at Gurudwara Bangla Sahib. Every Sevak is identity-verified by Sevahey, and you see who served you on your proof receipt.
Yes. Devotees outside India can contribute to the langar at Bangla Sahib through Sevahey and receive proof that the seva was offered in their name — a way to take part in the Guru's free kitchen from anywhere in the world.
Gurudwara Bangla Sahib is known for its healing sarovar — linked to Guru Har Krishan, who served the sick during an epidemic in 1664 — and for a langar that feeds tens of thousands of people daily. With Sevahey, a verified Sevak offers your ardas there and sends same-day proof.
Your Sevak times the seva to the Gurudwara's schedule — most are offered during the morning Asa di Var kirtan or the evening Rehras. You can request a preferred time when you book, and the exact slot is confirmed in the Sevahey app.
The ardas itself takes a few minutes. Your full proof — GPS-tagged photos, a short video, audio from the kirtan, and a handwritten note — is delivered the same day the seva is done.
Yes. You can request a specific date or occasion such as Guru Nanak Jayanti (Gurpurab) when you book, and your Sevak offers the ardas at Bangla Sahib on that day, subject to the Gurudwara's schedule.
You can request an ardas at Gurudwara Bangla Sahib for yourself, your parents, a child, an ancestor, or anyone in whose name you wish it offered. You provide the name and details when you book.
Yes. Your booking and the name your ardas is offered in are kept private — only you receive the proof of the seva.
Every Sevak is identity-verified, you see exactly who offered your ardas at the Gurudwara, and you receive GPS-tagged photo, video, and audio proof — not just a promise. Sevas start from ₹251, with the price shown upfront and no subscription.
When you cannot be there, your faith still can.