Close X
Saturday, November 16, 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

    Accused Retired Kamloops Teacher Contradicts Neighbour Who Found CDs Of Child Porn

    Accused Retired Kamloops Teacher Contradicts Neighbour Who Found CDs Of Child Porn
    Jerry Waselenkoff, 66, took the stand in his own defence Tuesday on a single count at his trial in B.C. Supreme Court in Kamloops.

    Accused Retired Kamloops Teacher Contradicts Neighbour Who Found CDs Of Child Porn

    Omar Khadr: Youth Or Adult? Question Goes To Canada's Top Court Thursday

    TORONTO — The case of former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr returns to Canada's top court for a third time on Thursday, as the federal government fights to have him declared an adult offender for crimes he committed as a 15-year-old.

    Omar Khadr: Youth Or Adult? Question Goes To Canada's Top Court Thursday

    Canadian Air Task Force In Iraq Gets Female Commander, Former Sea King Pilot

    Canadian Air Task Force In Iraq Gets Female Commander, Former Sea King Pilot
      Brig.-Gen. Lise Bourgon, has taken over responsibility for the country's air task force in a ceremony at the air base where Canadian aircraft conducting strikes against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant are based.

    Canadian Air Task Force In Iraq Gets Female Commander, Former Sea King Pilot

    Canadians Join Campaigners Calling For End To UN Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

    Canadians Join Campaigners Calling For End To UN Peacekeeper Sex Abuse
    The coalition, which calls itself Code Blue, wants UN Secretary Ban Ki-moon to lift the diplomatic immunity that protects UN employees from being held to account when abuse complaints arise.

    Canadians Join Campaigners Calling For End To UN Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

    Quebec Says School Officials Will No Longer Strip-Search Students

    Quebec Says School Officials Will No Longer Strip-Search Students
    QUEBEC — School officials in Quebec will no longer be permitted to strip search students as the provincial government moved to act on a report recommending that only police officers conduct such examinations.

    Quebec Says School Officials Will No Longer Strip-Search Students

    Officials Seek Info After Attack At Kabul Hotel, Site Of Party Honouring Canadian

    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs says Canadian officials in Kabul and Ottawa are working to get more information after a guesthouse in the Afghan capital was stormed by armed gunmen.

    Officials Seek Info After Attack At Kabul Hotel, Site Of Party Honouring Canadian