Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
International

30,000 Expected At New York's International Yoga Day Celebration

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Jun, 2015 12:33 PM
    As the world celebrates International Day of Yoga on Sunday in a unique event that is in many ways an endorsement of the Indian way of life, more than 30,000 people are expected to participate in a mass demonstration of the ancient art in the city's Times Square after global leaders and diplomats from around the world launch the observance at the UN headquarters.
     
    Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is to deliver the keynote address at the start of the day's celebrations at the UN headquarters in an open plaza along the East River, India's Permanent Representative Asoke Kumar Mukerji told reporters here Tuesday. General Assembly President Sam Kutesa and External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj are slated to speak on the occasion along with representatives of some of the nations that co-sponsored the International Day of Yoga resolution.
     
    Sri Sri Ravishankar, the founder of the Art of Living Foundation is to give a lecture on the benefits of yoga and lead a demonstration by several hundred people at the UN and, through a video link, the thousands on Times Square, which is known as "the crossroads of the world."
     
    The UN celebrations are to be webcast on the UN network () and also shown on the NASDAQ market building's giant, seven storey-tall video screen and others on Times Square.
     
    "Yoga offers a simple, accessible and inclusive means to promote physical and spirtual health and well-being," Ban said in his message for International Day of Yoga. "It promotes respect for one's fellow human beings and for the planet we share."
     
    He said that he had tried out yoga by doing the tree pose or Vrksasana and "appreciated the simple sense of satisfaction that yoga can bring."
     
     
    A manifestation of the universal value of "vasudhaiva kutumbakam" -- the world is one family, the UN General Assembly resolution for International Day of Yoga was co-sponsored by 177 nations and adopted by acclamation by the 193-member organisation, Mukerji said. This was the largest number of co-sponsors ever for such a resolution, he added.
     
    The idea of an International Day of Yoga was proposed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi in his address to the General Assembly last September, calling yoga "a holistic approach to health and well being" and to finding "the sense of oneness with yourself, the world and the nature."
     
    "Yoga embodies the unity of mind and body; thought and action; restraint and fulfilment; the harmony between man and nature; a holistic approach to health and well being. It is not about exercise but to discover the sense of oneness with yourself, the world and the nature."
     
    For yoga day to be observed starting this year, Mukerji said the resolution for it had to be passed by the General Assembly before the end of last year but the calendar had already been set with no room for fresh items.
     
    The Indian Mission found a way around this by invoking the association Modi made between health and yoga, Mukerji said. They had the Yoga Day resolution introduced as part of the health agenda that was already on the calendar for December, he said.
     
    The Mission brought the full force of multilateral diplomacy to bear on the project, he said. The Indian diplomats were able to have the 18 co-sponsors they initial had snowball to reach a total of 177 co-sponsors. And when both the United States and China signed on, the effort gained momentum.
     
    Asked by a reporter about the role of Muslim countries as co-sponsors and the controversies raised in India by some Muslims, Mukerji said yoga was presented as a health matter with no religious undertones and he pointed out that 47 of the 56 members of the Muslim grouping, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, joined as co-sponsors. While Pakistan and Saudi Arabia did not co-sponsor, they did not object to the resolution either.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea

    Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea
    The US, which had blamed North Korea for a cyber attack on Sony Pictures Entertainment, Monday demanded that the communist country should...

    Pay for Sony hacking losses: US to North Korea

    Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia

    Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia
    An Indian housemaid who has not been paid for six years by her employer in Saudi Arabia is still awaiting her salary in arrears and a final exit home...

    Indian maid denied salary in Saudi Arabia

    1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad

    1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad
    Law enforcement agencies have identified 1,159 educational institutes in the Pakistani capital as soft targets for terrorists, the media reported Tuesday....

    1,159 educational institutions soft targets in Islamabad

    Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?

    Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?
    As South Asia was watching the terrible tragedy at Peshawar unfold another drama was coming to head in Hollywood. At the eye of the storm was ‘The Interview’...

    Sony hacking: Cyber vandalism or cyber terrorism?

    Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive

    Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive
    A fresh look at data collected by NASA's Cassini spacecraft during its 2001 flyby of Jupiter shows that its moon Europa's tenuous atmosphere is even thinner than previously thought....

    Signs of Europa's plumes remain elusive

    More power to Indian diaspora in US

    More power to Indian diaspora in US
    Notching successes in fields as diverse as poetry and politics, some three million- strong Indian American community packed more power and influence...

    More power to Indian diaspora in US