International Yoga Day celebrated across the globe
Indian Prime Minister Narenda Modi (C) at a mass yoga in Lucknow, marking the 3rd International Yoga Day on June 21, 2017 - AFP |
Hundreds of thousands of men, women and young people of
almost every age took to the mat across the globe on Wednesday for a yoga
session to mark the 3rd International Yoga Day. Rains failed to dampen
the spirits of about 50,000 who joined an outdoor yoga session, June 21, with
Indian prime minister Narendra Modi in a park in Lucknow, capital of the
northern state of Uttar Pradesh.
"Yoga has connected the world with India," Modi
told a cheering crowd. "Yoga is about health assurance. It is not
even expensive to practice," said Modi who was instrumental in getting the
United Nations declare the International Yoga Day in December 2014. The
first International Yoga Day was marked on June 21, 2015. The
physical, mental and spiritual practice which aims to transform both body and
mind, began in ancient India, and is popular throughout the globe.
The Modi's official Twitter handle, which has more than 30
million followers, has posted pictures of mass yoga sessions in China,
Colombia, the United States, Paraguay, Mexico, Italy, Singapore and atop Machu
Picchu, a 15th century Inca citadel in Peru. Social media was flooded
with pictures of yoga, the country's signature cultural export, being performed
in various places including an Indian Navy submarine and the landing deck of an
aircraft carrier.
Indian President Pranab Mukherjee held a yoga session at the
presidential palace and several members of Modi's cabinet joined similar events
across the country. Meanwhile, some hundred diplomats from various
foreign missions joined a yoga session organized by the Ministry of External Affairs
in the Indian capital. External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and a
number of high-ranking officials of the ministry were among those who attended
the event.
In her brief remarks, Ms Swaraj stressed that yoga belongs
not merely to India, but to the whole world and that it is a "complete
system" for wellbeing and harmony "within ourselves, as well as with
nature".
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