Close X
Thursday, September 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Mass Yoga Event On Vancouver's Burrard Bridge Cancelled After Widespread Backlash

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2015 01:09 PM
    VICTORIA -- A mass yoga session planned for a downtown Vancouver bridge has collapsed after British Columbia's premier announced she would drop out of the event and two companies backed out of sponsoring it.
     
    Christy Clark responded to backlash by tweeting that she will not participate in Om the Bridge on June 21 and that yoga is about celebrating peace and harmony, not politics.
     
    Retailer Lululemon and YYoga, a chain of yoga studios, then announced they will pull out of sponsoring the event that would have closed the Burrard Street Bridge in the city's downtown.
     
     
    Both companies said in separate statements Friday that their intentions were pure but they heard only disappointment and frustration about the event.
     
    "We hoped that our intentions would shine through but that has not been the case," YYoga founder Terry McBride said.
    He said the company is working on holding a yoga session in a park to "reflect the tradition of yoga and the wishes of our community."
     
    Lululemon spokeswoman Jill Battie said the company is "taking a deep cleansing breath and over the next several days, we'll be reimagining a celebration that honours the spirit and tradition of yoga and serves our communities in a more meaningful way."
     
    Clark's plan to close a major bridge to celebrate International Yoga Day even drew the ire of children's author Raffi. Others said the premier should be focusing on aboriginal issues because June 21 is also national Aboriginal Day.
     
     
    Clark has said Yoga Day is celebrated worldwide by millions of people and is sanctioned by the United Nations.
    Opposition NDP Leader John Horgan said that while Clark has said she wants to take the politics out of yoga, she is responsible for doing just that.
     
    Closing the bridge was expected to cost thousands of dollars.
     
     
     
    "Where this event went sideways was that it was an expense of public dollars that seemed wasteful," Horgan said. "Millionaires get tax breaks and the premier shuts down a road so she can have a yoga class. I think that offended people."
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    First Nations' Report Calls For 'Super Fund' To Cover Mine Disasters

    First Nations' Report Calls For 'Super Fund' To Cover Mine Disasters
    VICTORIA — A mining organization representing B.C. First Nations wants companies to bank roll an emergency fund that will cover the cost of disasters similar to last summer's Mount Polley tailings dam collapse.

    First Nations' Report Calls For 'Super Fund' To Cover Mine Disasters

    Western Mothers Launch Appeal Asking Their Children Who Joined ISIL To Come Home

    Western Mothers Launch Appeal Asking Their Children Who Joined ISIL To Come Home
    BERLIN — A group of Western mothers whose children have joined the Islamic State group and other extremists in Syria and Iraq appealed Wednesday for them to return home, quoting from the Qur’an.

    Western Mothers Launch Appeal Asking Their Children Who Joined ISIL To Come Home

    Canada's Foreign Minister Expresses Strong Support For Israel During First Visit

    JERUSALEM — Foreign Affairs Minister Rob Nicholson is in Israel on a visit to show what he calls Canada's "unwavering support" for the Jewish state.

    Canada's Foreign Minister Expresses Strong Support For Israel During First Visit

    12-Year-Old Boy Dies After Stabbing At Downtown Toronto Hotel

    12-Year-Old Boy Dies After Stabbing At Downtown Toronto Hotel
    Officers were called to reports of the stabbing at the Cambridge Suites Hotel in the city's financial district just before 6 a.m.

    12-Year-Old Boy Dies After Stabbing At Downtown Toronto Hotel

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Surrey Couple Found Guilty Of Plotting B.C. Legislature Bombing

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Surrey Couple Found Guilty Of Plotting B.C. Legislature Bombing
    Some things to know about John Nuttall and his wife Amanda Korody from undercover videos shown to the jury. The pair, who were found guilty of terror-related charges, were recent converts to Islam:

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Surrey Couple Found Guilty Of Plotting B.C. Legislature Bombing

    Edmonton School Board Says It Shouldn't Have Asked For Bus Driver To Be Fired

    Edmonton School Board Says It Shouldn't Have Asked For Bus Driver To Be Fired
    Edmonton's Catholic school board is apologizing to a bus driver who kicked a student off his bus for unruly behaviour.

    Edmonton School Board Says It Shouldn't Have Asked For Bus Driver To Be Fired