Near Lahore, Baba contacted a very rare seventh-plane God-realized majzoob called Shahabuddin . Baba bathed him, and the majzoob led Baba to a secluded spot where they could be alone.
Baba went to Rawalpindi on Friday, 23 July 1943 with Ghani, Baidul and Gustadji. Adi Sr. arrived the next day for a ten-day stay and accompanied Baba on his mast tour. Don met them in Rawalpindi, where they slept out on the roof of a musaffar khana (Muslim dharamshala) because of the heat. That day in Rawalpindi, Baba contacted a very old mastani called Unti Mai . The old woman, who sat on a pile of bricks, naked except for a dirty sack covering her body, seldom let anyone approach her, but when she saw Baba she called to him to come near. Baba climbed up the pile of bricks and sat with her. Hidden under the sack cloth was a piece of stale, moldy bread which she offered to Baba, who ate it in front of her.
Also in Rawalpindi, Baba contacted a quiet old mast called Mastan Shah, who mostly sat across from a movie theater.
Another contact was Nanga Khan , a naked mast of the fifth plane, who would usually run around the town for about five miles at a stretch. When he was not running, he rested in a dirt pit alongside a road. The mast acted like a marathon runner, and if he did walk about the city, he always walked in circles. This mast liked to ask for money, and when given it, threw it away into the street.
After contacting the mast, Baba sat for three hours alone in seclusion on a hill at a place called Satra Mil (Seventeenth Mile) on the road to Murree. Baba and the men returned to Lahore by 27 July.
As Baba was traveling in search of masts, events in the war were rapidly developing. At the beginning of July 1943, Hitler not only suffered a defeat with the collapse of his massive offensive in the east, but also the Allies landed in Sicily. Two days after Baba's most recent mast trip, Mussolini resigned after 21 years as dictator of Italy.
