Satkartar is still their form of salutation as well as their formula for meditation. Sangat Das enjoyed the favour of Guru Hargobind who allowed him to set up his own dharamsala or place of worship at Sri Hargobindpur on the bank of the river Beas, in Gurdaspur district.This place, a four storeyed building known as Dharamsala Satkartarian, is till today the principal centre of the sect. Another centre was established at Phagwara, in Kapurthala district, by Darbari Das, the younger son of Sangat Das.
A third centre is at Mandi, a district town in Himachal Pradesh. Another centre at Batala in Gurdaspur district was taken over by Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee in 1940. It is still called Gurdwara Satkartariari. Satkartarias generally follows the Udasi ritual and practices. Their only link with Sikhism is that their dharamsala at Sri Hargobindpur has the Guru Granth Sahib installed in it. A suite of armour kept as a sacred relic there is claimed to have been bestowed on Baba Sangat Das by Guru Hargobind.
References :
1. Gian Singh, Giani, Sri Guru Panth Prakash. [Reprint]. Patiala, 1970
2. Kahn Singh, Gurushabad Ratnakar Mahan Kosh [Reprint]. Patiala, 1981
3. Rose, H.A. (ed.) A Glossary of the Tribes and Castes of the Punjab and North-West Frontier Province. Lahore, 1911-19