Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
India

Modi gets grand welcome in Delhi, propitiates gods in Varanasi

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 May, 2014 01:44 PM
    Thousands of BJP supporters gave a rousing welcome Saturday to Narendra Modi, set to be India's prime minister, as he flew into Delhi and set out in a motorcade to the party headquarters.
     
    A sea of supporters waved BJP flags, blew conches, beat drums, danced and shouted slogans as soon as Modi stepped out of the airport after flying in from Gujarat. The celebrations continued all through the long route.
     
    Besides BJP president Rajnath Singh, the seven newly elected Bharatiya Janata Party MPs from Delhi were among those who received Modi, visiting Delhi a day after the announcement of the Lok Sabha results. 
     
     
    As Modi set out from the airport, he leaned out of the front window and flashed a V sign. 
     
    The motorcade, now protected by the Special Protection Group (SPG), then proceeded to the BJP headquarters, at times slowing down to acknowledge the greetings of Modi fans gathered on the streets.
     
     
    A mass of flag carrying, Modi-mask wearing supporters were at select spots along the route from the airport to the BJP office in the heart of the capital.
     
    Modi led his party to a stunning victory, making the BJP the first non-Congress party since independence in 1947 to win a comfortable majority on its own in the 545-member Lok Sabha.
     
    "We have great hopes from Modiji. There is no leader like him," Poornima Rawat, a young party worker, told IANS.
     
    BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad told the media: "Today is a day of celebration. Party workers are enthusiastic. The country is enthusiastic. Entire India has voted for him."
     
    More than 1,000 Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) and Delhi Police personnel were deployed at the airport since early morning.
     
     
    Modi contested from Vadodara in Gujarat and Varanasi in Uttar Pradesh. He won handsomely from both places.
     
    Modi is here to attend a key BJP meeting. He will later Saturday visit Varanasi to pray at the Kashi Vishwanath temple and take part in the Ganga Aarti.
     
    Modi propitiates gods in Varanasi
     
    After months of a nerve-racking election campaign and the maddening deluge of supporters thereafter, India's soon-to-be prime minister Narendra Modi spent Saturday evening propitiating gods here in the temple town of Varanasi.
     
    After landing at the Babatpur airport, the Bharatiya Janata Party leader flew in a chopper to the reserve police line grounds from where his heavily guarded cavalcade drove to the Kashi Vishwanath temple.
     
    As he walked through the narrow lanes leading to the seat of Lord Shiva, Modi was surrounded by a battery of National Security Guard commandos and special troopers of the Uttar Pradesh Police's anti-terrorist squad.
     
     
    Accompanied by BJP president Rajnath Singh and close aide Amit Shah, Modi performed a 45-minute puja at the sanctum sanctorum of the temple, one of the 12 'jyotirlingas' in the country.
     
    Sitting cross-legged, the Gujarat chief minister performed the puja aided by 11 specially commissioned priests.
     
    He asked the priests not to hurry and do the puja as per norms, a source inside the temple told IANS.
     
    Modi then performed the 'jalabhishek' (offering of Ganga water on the gold plated Shiva linga) after which a concoction of honey, jaggery, crushed sugar, ghee, curd, milk and 'bhasma' was offered to the reigning deity of Kashi.
     
    He completed the puja by offering 'bel patra' and lotus flowers, Subodh Shastri, a priest at the temple, told IANS.
     
    Chandan (sandalwood paste) was then smeared on his forehead and he was gifted a cloth and 'rudraksha' as a memento from the Kashi Vishwanath temple.
     
    Modi left for the Dashashwamedh Ghat on the banks of the Ganga where he took part in the evening 'Ganga Aarti' and spent more than 90 minutes at the banks of the river.
     
     
    As the soulful renditions and vedic hymns were sung, Modi tapped along and seemed lost in the spiritually charged atmosphere.
     
    He later admitted in his address that he felt like a child in the lap of his mother and assured the people that he will do everything he can to make a turnaround of the polluted river.
     
    Taking part in the aarti that was started by the Ganga Seva Nidhi in 1999, Modi said it was an exhilarating experience and urged people to contribute in their own ways to establish the city as a centre of cultural and spiritual excellence.
     
    Exhorting people to begin with ensuring that they did not dump garbage on the city roads, he said he felt as if he has been mandated by Goddess Ganga to clean up the river and usher in a change in the temple town.
     
    He said whatever he was saying during the evening was straight from his heart and should not be interpreted according to political parameters.
     
    Modi rued the recent developments when he was not allowed to hold rallies in the city and said the Varanasi election was unique in the sense that a party candidate was not allowed to campaign and speak to his electorate.
     
     
    But the fact that people voted in multitudes for him indebted him for ever, he added.
     
    Modi took a dig at the Congress and other opposition parties, saying how people gave them so less seats that they are now forced to make a coalition for opposition!
     

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Reliance pleads not guilty in 2G case

    Reliance pleads not guilty in 2G case
    Reliance Telecom told a special court on second generation telecom spectrum allocation case Monday that it had violated no guidelines formulated by the government.

    Reliance pleads not guilty in 2G case

    SC notice to EC on vote count procedure

    SC notice to EC on vote count procedure
    The Supreme Court Monday issued notice to the Election Commission on a plea seeking direction for combined counting of votes from a constituency as a whole and not ward-wise.

    SC notice to EC on vote count procedure

    Lok Sabha election ends, India awaits verdict

    Lok Sabha election ends, India awaits verdict
    India's most bitterly fought national election ended Monday evening, with some 60 percent of the 66 million electorate in three states voting in the 10th and last leg of a contest widely tipped to end a decade of Congress rule.

    Lok Sabha election ends, India awaits verdict

    BJP-led NDA to win big, oust Congress

    BJP-led NDA to win big, oust Congress
    The BJP-led NDA coalition is poised to return to power by winning a majority in the Lok Sabha, ending a decade of Congress-led UPA rule, exit polls said Monday after the general election ended.

    BJP-led NDA to win big, oust Congress

    Lok Sabha battle, overshadowed by Modi, ends Monday

    Lok Sabha battle, overshadowed by Modi, ends Monday
     India's most bitterly fought parliamentary elections end Monday when the last lot of 41 Lok Sabha constituencies vote in three major states, bringing the curtains down on a five-week-plus process widely expected to end a decade of Congress rule.

    Lok Sabha battle, overshadowed by Modi, ends Monday

    500 days on, crusaders keep Dec 16 fight alive

    500 days on, crusaders keep Dec 16 fight alive
    "Shapath lo, balaatkaar mukt Bharat ki" (Pledge for a rape-free India), reads a banner at Jantar Mantar in the heart of the national capital. Inscribed below is "Damini", referring to the Dec 16, 2012, gang-rape victim. Next to it stands a lit lamp, leaving you feeling calm despite the sweltering heat.

    500 days on, crusaders keep Dec 16 fight alive