[इस साल स्वास्थ्य बजट है कम
लेकिन योगा में है दम
बन गए हीरो हम
(Obviously, borrowed from a friend.
For cuts in health budget, may look up:
<http://www.bmj.com/company/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/India-health-funding-cuts-1.pdf>)

The Congress released a photograph of India’s first prime minister
Jawaharlal Nehru in [perfect] “shirshasana” calling him a “practising
yogi” [see it here:
<http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=21_06_2015_015_011_014&type=P&artUrl=The-Baba-who-became-brand-ambassador-of-yoga-21062015015011&eid=31804>]
in an attempt to project that it was not against yoga.

An old adage: Practice is better than precept.]

I/II.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/home/sunday-times/all-that-matters/Of-foot-in-mouth-asanas-and-record-chasing-govts/articleshow/47750448.cms?

Of foot-in-mouth asanas and record-chasing govts
Jun 21, 2015, 12.01 AM IST

Is yoga really about piling people into one space for bragging rights
to a world record?

By Deepti Kapoor

You won't find many of my fellow yogis involved in the tamasha that is
the International Day of Yoga. I fired off a bunch of emails to
practitioner friends and acquaintances around the world, and the
responses were split between those who'd never (or only vaguely) heard
of it — too busy actually doing yoga — and those who were aware, but
saw it as political theatre concocted for pomp, circumstance and
self-promotion. One senior Ashtangi, who wished to remain anonymous,
told me: "I find commemorative days in general to be a bit silly. Yoga
should be celebrated, and moreover practised, every day (or at least
regularly)."

Of course, it doesn't take a Vedic-era rocket scientist to understand
that the International Day of Yoga never had much to do with yoga. It
was always more about the churning PR wheel of the government, and its
desire to assert itself on the global stage, assuaging anxieties about
being left behind.

Alas, it's chosen to do this via coercion and an undercurrent of
duress, cajoling reluctant parties to get involved in two Guinness
World Record attempts, one for the world's largest yoga class and the
other for the most nationalities in a class: instead of an inclusive
and non-divisive celebration, we have a tawdry record attempt,
conducted under the mistaken impression that such things (much like a
56-inch chest — seriously, who brags about that?) are signs of
greatness.

A recent cabinet circular states: "The cabinet secretary has mentioned
that if officials turn up without practice and their performance is
not up to the mark, we run the risk of the record claim in the
Guinness Book of World Records being affected."

"There is a stick hanging over all of us," Kuldeep Kumar of AIR told
the New York Times in a recent piece. "When the Prime Minister comes,
if officials do not show up, of course it is bad for their career."
Then there's the desire to put India's cultural worth on display.

"Yoga is the soft power of India," said foreign minister Sushma
Swaraj, "and through that soft power the whole world can be one global
village, and this trend of violence can be done away with..." Ah yes,
this trend of violence.

Would that include the violence emanating from the mouth of BJP MP for
Gorakhpur, Yogi Adityanath, who said that if anyone objected to the
Surya Namaskar, they should drown themselves in the sea (in fairness
to Swaraj, she has disowned his comment)?

Try as they might, politicians and leaders on all sides can't help
scoring points while shooting themselves in their feet. H R Nagendra,
credited as being one of Modi's gurus, talks in the same NYT piece
about the benefits of yoga. "It is the extreme stress that takes
place, the stressful life, the wrong lifestyle, which makes them go
for homosexuality." But don't worry, he adds. Yoga will cure that.

It isn't long before other aspects of Western culture (remember,
homosexuality is foreign) get a bashing. This from Shripad Naik, our
own yoga minister:

"Earlier, our people used to get up before sunrise and sleep before
sunset, but now our lifestyle has changed. They are going to the pub,
they will go in the middle of the night, at 12 or 1, and eat chicken
and many, many new dishes... (but) There will be a lifestyle
change...our style will come."

The irony of course is that if Naik opened his eyes, he'd realize
that, in many ways, his style (minus the xenophobia and vitriol) has
already arrived — as healthy lifestyles, often analogous to the old
Indian habits he outlines above, are increasingly popular in the West.

It is the yoga that was transmitted from India to America in the '70s
that's chiefly responsible for this. The yoga that my foreign friends
and teachers practise, the people who have taught me more about
discipline, professionalism, equality and respect than most. And now
my own mother-in-law, in a small town in northern England that's
historically more prone to drinking and fighting, attends a weekly
yoga class. She also eats brown rice and vegetables for most meals,
has cut down on red meat, caffeine and alcohol, and partakes, along
with my father-in-law, in intermittent fasting. Sure, the yoga she and
her friends partake in is barely Indian, or even Californian, but its
heritage is undeniable.

And while there are certain faddish forms — such as Acro-Yoga and
Broga (yoga for bros) — that smack of rank commodification, are they
really any worse than piling as many people as possible into one space
in order to get bragging rights to a Guinness World Record?

The worst thing is, India has a massive store of global goodwill and
cultural capital. If the administration wasn't so obsessed with
records and its fringe elements not so rabid, it could have easily
ridden on that. Instead, a celebration turned into a showcase for
incompetence, vanity, tension and communal bigotry. All things that
are, sadly, as Indian as yoga.

Kapoor is an author and Goa-based yoga practitioner

II.
http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/congress-slams-pm-narendra-modi-for-trying-to-usurp-yoga/

Congress slams PM Narendra Modi for ‘trying to usurp yoga’

*The party released a photograph of India’s first prime minister
Jawaharlal Nehru in “shirshasana” calling him a “practising yogi” in
an attempt to project that it was not against yoga.*

By: Express News Service | New Delhi | Updated: June 21, 2015 5:39 am

On the eve of International Yoga Day, the Congress on Saturday accused
Prime Minister Narendra Modi of indulging in “brazen and shameless
attempts” to usurp yoga and turning it into a “coercive and divisive
issue”.

The party released a photograph of India’s first prime minister
Jawaharlal Nehru in “shirshasana” calling him a “practising yogi” in
an attempt to project that it was not against yoga.

The Congress has been cautious not to offend religious sentiments
while attacking Modi on the issue. “Practise yourself before you
preach to others,” Congress told Modi, citing a quotation by Mahatma
Gandhi. The party spoke about the usefulness of yoga and said it
unequivocally supports its voluntary practice.

INTERNATIONAL YOGA DAY
Yoga Not Religious; An Antidote To Violence, Conflict: Sushma Swaraj At UN
Yoga Day Celebration At Rajpath Sets Two Guinness World Records
>From Siachen To South China Sea, Indian Armed Forces Observe
International Yoga Day
Troops In Northeast Observe Yoga Day

PM Narendra Modi Politely Refuses Selfies On International Day Of Yoga
Congress spokesperson Randeep Singh Surjewala said a public relation
exercise is on to project the Prime Minister and his party as the
‘inventors of yoga’.

The intention of the government, he said, was to create unnecessary
divisive debates and in the process divert the attention of the people
from the “misdeeds, scandals and failures of this government.”

Calling the Prime Minister an “event and headline manager”, Surjewala
alleged that it was indeed a pity that even as burning issues affect
the nation, the Prime Minister is lost in “Lalit Asan”.

“The suited-booted PM believes in Raj Yog whereas the country urgently
requires a Karm Yogi,” he said.

First Published on: June 21, 2015 1:28 am
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Peace Is Doable

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