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Modi hails unifying power of yoga

(China Daily) Updated: 2017-06-22 07:38

Modi hails unifying power of yoga 

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi participates in a mass yoga session in Lucknow on Wednesday. Millions of people across the globe took part in the third International Yoga Day.Sanjay Kanojia / Agence Francepresse

LUCKNOW, India - Yoga has connected the world with India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Wednesday, as he rolled out his mat along with millions of others across the globe to celebrate the ancient practice.

Enthusiasts across India rose at the crack of dawn, many braving monsoon showers, to mark the third International Yoga Day.

In the western city of Ahmedabad, 125,000 people led by celebrity yoga guru Baba Ramdev gathered at an open-air ground to try to set a new Guinness World Record for the largest session.

Police in New Delhi closed roads for a mass yoga session held amid tight security in the heart of the capital.

"When all of us, at the same time, do the same movements, it feels special. The energy is different," said 24-year-old Abhi Aggarwal as he waited with his parents for the session to start.

India's prime minister, a teetotal vegetarian who practices yoga daily, led some 50,000 people in an early-morning session in Lucknow, the capital of the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

"Many countries which do not know our language, tradition, or culture are now connecting to India through yoga," Modi said in an address to the crowd.

"Yoga connects body, mind and soul. It is playing a big role in bringing the world together too," he said after performing various poses.

Modi, who credits his strict yoga regime for his ability to work long hours on little sleep, has been spearheading an initiative to reclaim the practice as a historic part of Indian culture since his Hindu nationalist government came to power in 2014.

On Wednesday, from China's Great Wall to the London Eye, yoga fans performed asanas, or poses, at major landmarks in more than 100 countries.

Across India, schoolchildren, soldiers, politicians and bureaucrats bent and twisted their bodies on colorful mats at mass outdoor sessions.

Television footage showed Indian soldiers performing yoga in their military overalls in the Himalayan region of Ladakh, at a height of 5,500 meters.

Vishnudeo Vishwakarma, a retired former Air India employee, said he began each day with a 5 am yoga session.

"If you buy a machine and don't operate it ... after one year, the machine will not run. Your body is like that," the 66-year-old told said in Delhi. "Your joints and muscles will be stuck up."

Indian scholars believe yoga dates back 5,000 years, based on archaeological evidence of poses found inscribed on stones and references to Yogic teachings in ancient Hindu scriptures

Agence France-presse

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