The National - News

Modi walks the talk on Yoga Day

Indian prime minister surprises thousands by attending a mass demonstrat­ion as 190 countries join the global campaign

- Samanth Subramania­n ssubramani­an@thenationa­l.ae

NEW DELHI // Dressed in white, with a strip of cloth bearing the colours of the Indian flag around his neck, prime minister Narendra Modi surprised 37,000 volunteers when he took part in a mass yoga demonstrat­ion yesterday.

It was India’s central event of Internatio­nal Yoga Day, which was observed in more than 190 countries.

Participan­ts of the 35-minute session had expected Mr Modi only to deliver an inaugurati­on speech at the event on Raj Path, a wide avenue running through the heart of Delhi. “Who would have thought that Raj Path would become Yoga Path?” Mr Modi said in his speech, delivered before the event started at 7am.

Amid tight security, the volunteers – drawn from schools and universiti­es, the army, NGOs, and the civil service – followed instructio­ns in Hindi and English, bending and twisting their bodies through a variety of poses.

The volunteers wore blue-andred track trousers and white T-shirts with the Internatio­nal Yoga Day logo emblazoned on them. They performed their exercises on red mats, which in turn lay upon green matting that had been unrolled upon the tarmac. Among the participan­ts was Arvind Kejriwal, the chief minister of Delhi.

“Yoga is a good thing. Everybody should do it,” he said. Another one was Dharma Rai, 27, a medical technician who is a member of Patanjali Yogpeeth, a yoga institute with branches across the country.

She was chosen for the event by her head trainer in her hometown, Haridwar. Ms Rai, a spry and experience­d hand at yoga, said that the seven main asanas, or positions, that the volunteers performed on Raj Path were “basic ones”.

“We learnt them at the very beginning, when we first started learning yoga,” she said. “But it was still a lot of fun to do. Yoga brought a lot of peace to my life. I’m glad the prime minister is trying to spread its message.”

Stationed at Raj Path since 11pm the night before, Jat Nilam, a constable of the Central Reserve Police Force, watched and admitted that she had never done yoga before.

“I didn’t realise there was so much interest in this activity,” Ms Nilam said.

“But it looks easy, doesn’t it? Our police training was much more difficult than this. Can you get fit just by doing these simple exercises?”

Rahul Mandal, a middle-aged businessma­n who had brought along his young daughter, wanted to be allowed closer to watch the yoga event. Ms Nilam, however, kept them behind the police barricade, more than 100 metres away from the nearest event volunteer.

“If they really want to promote it, this is not the way,” Mr Mandal said. “They should want people to come closer, to be inspired. If they can do it for the military parades on Republic Day, why couldn’t they have done it for this?” However, Mr Mandal agreed that the event seemed to be very well organised.

“They even have first aid booths and water stations,” he said, pointing along the sides of the long, rectangula­r mass of people.

On a large grassy median near where Mr Mandal was standing, another instructor was conducting his own, informal Yoga Day event, with 40 students who had wandered up and joined in.

Torsos heaved and fell. Arms flailed about. Heads pivoted from side to side.

“That’s the way, that’s the way,” the instructor called. “Do this every day. It’ll be good for you.”

A couple of kilometres away, in the relative quiet of Lodhi Gardens, a large public park set around 15th- century royal tombs, Archana Phadnis led a short class of her own. Wearing a lime green T-shirt and black tights, she called out instructio­ns in Hindi and English.

Her wards, an assembly of old and young people, stretched for 15 minutes. Then Ms Phadnis took them through the Surya Namaskar, a salutation of the sun that incorporat­es 12 stretches and movements into a cycle of exercise. “I conduct this class every Sunday,” she said.

“Anyone who is here is welcome to take part since we need no equipment for it.”

Usually, she gets more than 20 participan­ts. “Today, I had almost 80,” she said. “I don’t know whether it was because of all this hype surroundin­g Yoga Day.”

Under a tree in another part of Lodhi Gardens, Vikram Ranjith, 41, a sales executive, had rolled out his mat and was powering through asanas on his own. His only company was his iPod.

“I listen to some spiritual chanting when I do my yoga,” said Mr Ranjith, who has been doing yoga for two decades.

“I started it as exercise, but now it is something more,” he said.

“I don’t know if I’m happy with all this glamour around Yoga Day. Yoga should be something personal. It shouldn’t just be people doing mass exercise.”

 ?? Reuters ?? Tens of thousands of people take part in a yoga session on the Internatio­nal Yoga Day in New Delhi yesterday.
Reuters Tens of thousands of people take part in a yoga session on the Internatio­nal Yoga Day in New Delhi yesterday.
 ?? Kamil Zihnioglu / AP Photo ?? Hundreds perform yoga to mark Internatio­nal Yoga Day under the Eiffel Tower in Paris yesterday.
Kamil Zihnioglu / AP Photo Hundreds perform yoga to mark Internatio­nal Yoga Day under the Eiffel Tower in Paris yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates