Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Man Who Popularised Yoga In America Died With India On His Lips

M.R. Narayan Swamy IANS, 20 Jun, 2016 12:12 PM
    On June 21, when the world celebrates the International Yoga Day for a second year in running, yoga enthusiasts around the world must remember Paramhansa Yogananda, who did more than anyone else to take the ancient science beyond India's shores.
     
    If the UN decided to honour June 21 every year as the yoga day, the primary credit for this must go to Yogananda, who went to the US in 1920 and taught yoga and meditation for over three decades to many thousands of Americans at a time when yoga was a strange word.
     
    Yogananda returned to India on a short visit just once - when he taught Kriya Yoga to Mahatma Gandhi at Wardha. He went back to the US at the urging of his guru, passing away there in 1952 under unique circumstances.
     
    It was in 1946 that Yogananda published his path-breaking "Autobiography of a Yogi". In no time, it was recognised as one of the 10 best spiritual classics of the 20th century. No other book perhaps has done more to propagate yoga and spirituality. It has been translated into 21 languages and sold millions of copies.
     
     
    This year marks the 70th anniversary of "Autobiography of a Yogi" - which continues to be a best seller in the spiritual category and has pushed millions on the spiritual path around the world.
     
    Yogananda was born into a spiritually inclined family on January 5, 1893 in Gorakhpur (Uttar Pradesh) as Mukunda Lal Ghosh. He was the fourth of eight children and showed an early inclination for the self-realization path. His guru, Yukteswar Giri, goaded him to graduate and later ordained him as Yogananda. "Some day you will go the West. Its people will lend ears more receptive to India's ancient wisdom if the strange Hindu teacher has a university degree," was the guru's counsel.
     
    Three years after founding the Yogada Satsanga Society of India (YSS) in Ranchi in 1917, the young Yogananda sailed to Boston to take part in the International Congress of Religions. His mission was to unite the East and West by spiritual understanding, to show the underlying unity of all religions. 
     
    He travelled extensively in the US and captivated millions with his talks on yoga and meditation -- thus laying the foundations of yoga in the West that has today catapulted into the International Yoga Day.
     
     
    Yogananda was not ritualistic. He spoke secular language and never imposed his ideas on others. In the US, he underlined the spiritual and cultural heritage of India and held classes on balanced living -- using yoga as a medium. Finally, however, it was the "Autobiography of a Yogi" that put Yogananda on a spiritual pedestal where he remains even today.
     
    On March 7, 1952, at an event at Biltmore Hotel at Los Angeles attended by India's ambassador to the US, Yogananda gave what turned out to be his last talk - and hugely memorable. "I am proud that I was born in India," said the ochre-robed swami with flowing hair. "I am proud that we have a great ambassador representing my spiritual India. I am very proud today."
     
    And after reading out a few lines from his poem "My India", Yogananda slid to the floor, a beatific smile on his face. He had passed away. The stunned Indian ambassador, Binay R. Sen, who saw Yogananda's final moments, paid rich tributes: "He was born in India, he lived for India, and he died with the name of India on his lips."
     
     
    The Indian government issued a postage stamp in his honour way back in March 1977. Unfortunately, unlike Swami Vivekananda, Yogananda doesn't figure in schoolbooks the way he deserves to. Prime Minister Modi must pay his homage to this great yoga guru on June 21. 

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Italian Woman, 116, Seen As Last Living Person Born In 1800s

    Italian Woman, 116, Seen As Last Living Person Born In 1800s
    ERBANIA, Italy — Surrounded by relatives and neighbours, Italy's Emma Morano greeted with a smile the news that she, at 116, is now the oldest person in the world.

    Italian Woman, 116, Seen As Last Living Person Born In 1800s

    Wal-Mart Sharpens Amazon Attack With 2-Day Delivery Service

    Wal-Mart Sharpens Amazon Attack With 2-Day Delivery Service
    The world's largest retailer is trimming its free-shipping pilot program to two days from a three, and it's cutting a dollar off the membership price. Membership is now be $49 per year.

    Wal-Mart Sharpens Amazon Attack With 2-Day Delivery Service

    Uzbekistan School Teachers 'Paid In Chickens' Because Of Cash Shortages

    A city in Uzbekistan has paid its schoolteachers in chickens rather than cash, it's reported.

    Uzbekistan School Teachers 'Paid In Chickens' Because Of Cash Shortages

    Triumph For UK Woman Who Refused To Wear High Heels At Work

    Nicola Thorp, 27, had been told in December that her flat shoes were unacceptable in London while on assignment. She was sent home without pay after refusing to change her shoes.

    Triumph For UK Woman Who Refused To Wear High Heels At Work

    2 Brits, Mexican Are 1st Foreigners On Everest In 2 Years

    2 Brits, Mexican Are 1st Foreigners On Everest In 2 Years
    The six climbers reached the 8,850-meter (29,035-foot) peak early Thursday and were heading to lower camps, said Ang Tshering of the Nepal Mountaineering Association.

    2 Brits, Mexican Are 1st Foreigners On Everest In 2 Years

    Breastfeeding Pilots' Claims Against Airline Seen As Advance

    Breastfeeding Pilots' Claims Against Airline Seen As Advance
    DENVER — Charges by four female pilots that Frontier Airlines' policies for pregnant women and new mothers are discriminatory could be seen as progress, an advocate says.

    Breastfeeding Pilots' Claims Against Airline Seen As Advance