
Munshi Ram, With the Three Masters, volume 2 ( ISBN 81-8256-501-4) and volume 3 ( ISBN 81-8256-502-2), Beas: Radha Soami Satsang Beas. Kapur, Daryai Lal, Heaven on Earth, Beas: Radha Soami Satsang Beas, 1986. Compiled translated excerpts from talks and letters. Jagat Singh, Science of the Soul, Beas: Radha Soami Satsang Beas. Jagat Singh, Discourses on Sant Mat, volume 2. Before he died he appointed Sardar Charan Singh as his spiritual successor in a written will. He died on the morning of 23 October 1951. After his retirement in 1943, he lived permanently at Dera Baba Jaimal Singh. Throughout his own career as a college professor he made it a point to spend most of his weekends with his guru Hazur Maharaj Sawan Singh at the Dera and to spend most of his time in the Surat Shabd Yoga meditation practice. He had gone there with his cousin Sardar Bhagat Singh Clare and the Judge Rai Sahib Munshi Ram to hear his future guru, who was still in service there, deliver satsang. In Abbotabad on 28 December 1910 at the age of twenty-six, he was initiated into the meditation practice of Surat Shabd Yoga (also known as Nam Bhakti) by Hazur Maharaj Sawan Singh Ji.
He joined the Punjab Agricultural College, Lyallpur, in 1911 as Assistant Professor of Chemistry and retired as Vice Principal of the institution in 1943 receiving the title Sardar Bahadur for his thirty-two years of meritorious service. He then passed his MSc degree in Chemistry at the Government College of Lahore. He received his initial education in the Christian Mission School at Jalandhar. He was raised by his stepmother Bibi Rukmani Kaur. His mother Bibi Daya Kaur died when he was five years old. Jagat Singh Clare was born on 27 July 1884 into a family of prosperous and religious Jat Sikh farmers, in the small village of Nussi in the Jalandhar District of the Punjab, India.