Putting Covid-19 behind, New York celebrates Yoga Day - at 'crossroads of the world'

Rising from the pall of COVID-19 restrictions, New York City has celebrated International Yoga Day at the landmark Times Square with daylong performances of various yogic asanas

Arul Louis Jun 21, 2021
Image
International Day of Yoga is celebrated in New York's Times Square on Sunday, June 20, 2021. (Photo: Arul Louis)

Rising from the pall of COVID-19 restrictions, New York City has celebrated International Yoga Day at the landmark Times Square with daylong performances of various yogic asanas. The city's celebrations were held on Sunday – a day early to coincide with the Summer Solstice, which falls a day early this year – but the United Nations was scheduled to observe the day virtually on Monday.

The United Nations General Assembly declared June 21 the International Day of Yoga in 2014 at the initiative of India with the support of 177 countries.
More than 3,000 people participated in the “Mind Over Madness Yoga” performances organised by the Indian Consulate General and the Times Square Alliance.

India's Consul General Randhir Jaiswal said at the celebrations, “Yoga is a universal idea, universal thought, universal action. And what better place than Times Square to celebrate a universal thought. This is the crossroads of the world. You have people from all over the world coming, here people from five continents coming here, people from all cultures coming here.”

“While we celebrate yoga in various parts of the world, celebrating yoga here in Times Square is very special, very unique, more so today when it happens to be Father's Day, what a happy coincidence,” he said.

Times Square Alliance President Tom Harris said yoga is about “health, harmony, unity and togetherness.”

New York State had dropped most COVID-19 restrictions last Tuesday and Yoga Day was the first major event at Times Square. “We are back,” he said. “Now is the time to stop wishing and doing more.”

The consulate featured a stall with nature care, herbs and health materials from India, which Jaiswal said was to help people “live more in harmony with nature, more in harmony with traditional knowledge.”

The relay of yoga exercises that began at 7:30 am and continued till 8 pm were broadcast live on the internet to help those at home learn the art.

The day has been observed at the UN with top officials joining in the mass exercises -- except last year and this year because of the pandemic. 

On Monday, the UN is scheduled to hold a virtual event at 8:30 am New York Time (6 pm Indian Standard Time) that be telecast over UN TV, which is available on the internet, and on the Indian Mission's social media.

General Assembly President Volkan Bozkir is to deliver a message at the event and New York yoga teacher Eddie Stern is to give a demonstration.

A Saudi yoga instructor, Nouf Marwaai, an Indian doctor and author, Raman Krishnan, and Sam Rudra Swartz, a disciple of Swami Sachidananda and a hatha yoga teacher are to participate in an interactive dialogue on “Yoga and Wellbeing.”

Post a Comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.