NEET-NET Row: Centre Orders CBI Probe, Removes Chief of Exam Agency and Postpones NEET-PG

The Union health ministry postponed the NEET-PG 2024 exam as a ‘precautionary measure’ amid raging controversy over the conduct of exams. Fresh dates are yet to be announced.

New Delhi: In the wake of raging controversy over the conduct of public exams, the Union government late on Saturday evening ordered a Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) probe and removed Subodh Kumar Singh, the chief of the National Testing Agency (NTA).

“For transparency on the conduct of the examination process, the Ministry of Education, Government of India after a review has decided to entrust the matter to the Central Bureau of Investigation for comprehensive investigation,” a government press release said.

The Ministry of Personnel announced that Subodh Kumar Singh, who served as the director general of the NTA, has been replaced by retired IAS officer Pradeep Singh Kharola. Kharola is the chairman of the India Trade Promotion Organisation and has been given additional charge as the director general of the NTA “till the appointment of a regular incumbent or until further orders”.

In another major decision, the Union health ministry also postponed the NEET-PG 2024 exam as a “precautionary measure” amid raging controversy over the conduct of public exams, Union health secretary Apurva Chandra told the Indian Express.

“This decision has been taken in the best interests of the students and to maintain the sanctity of the examination process… fresh dates will be announced at the earliest,” the health ministry said in a statement.

Probe panel

Earlier in the day, the Union education ministry had also constituted a high-level committee of experts to ensure transparent, smooth and fair conduct of examinations.

Headed by K. Radhakrishnan, former chairman of the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), the committee will have seven members on the committee, including the chairman.

The committee will make recommendations on reform in the mechanism of the examination process, improvement in data security protocols and structure and functioning of the National Testing Agency (NTA), which is responsible for conducting exams. The Committee will submit its report to the ministry within two months, a press release from the government said.

The members of the committee are Dr Randeep Guleria, former director of the All Indian Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS); Professor B.J. Rao, vice-chancellor of the University of Hyderabad; Professor Ramamurthy, professor emeritus, department of civil engineering, IIT Madras; Pankaj Bansal, co-founder, People Strong and board member – Karmayogi Bharat; Professor Aditya Mittal, dean student affairs, IIT Delhi; and Govind Jaiswal, joint secretary, ministry of education, Government of India.

Law on public examinations

Meanwhile, facing the heat from mismanagement allegations surrounding multiple competitive examinations, the Union government on June 21 operationalised a law that aims to curb malpractices and irregularities in such examinations with a degree of stringency.

The The Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024, has provisions for a maximum jail term of 10 years and a fine of up to Rs 1 crore.

“In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (2) of section 1 of the Public Examinations (Prevention of Unfair Means) Act, 2024 (1 of 2024), the Central Government hereby appoints the 21st day of June, 2024, as the date on which the provisions of the said Act shall come into force,” says the notification.

The Act covers public examinations conducted by the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC), the Staff Selection Commission (SSC), the Railways, and the National Testing Agency among others.

President Droupadi Murmu gave assent to the law nearly four months ago. In the intervening time, India had its month-and-half long Lok Sabha elections.

In June this year, serious allegations of irregularities have surfaced surrounding paper leaks and the National Testing Agency’s conduct of the medical entrance exam NEET-UG. While this issue was on the boil, a paper leak suspicion over the UGC-NET exam – also conducted by the NTA – led to the government cancelling it. The Central Bureau of Investigation has lodged a case.

The CSIR-NET and the Bihar TET exams too have been postponed in the last 24 hours.

When the law was brought earlier this year, Congress MP Adhir Ranjan Chowdhury had said that the Bill has “penal measures but does not include preventive measures”.

He also said that the Bill gives “significant authority” to the Union government, “thus consolidating considerable control of investigation at [its] hands”.

Students at the Delhi University on June 21 raised slogans against Union education minister Dharmendra Pradhan, India Today has reported. The Telegraph additionally reported that Pradhan who was to attend a Yoga Day event at the Multipurpose Hall of the DU campus, skipped it.

“The invitation card was printed on June 18. He was to come but he declined last evening,” DU registrar Vikas Gupta said.

Manipuri Organisation Slams PM Modi’s Yoga Session at UN, Boycotts International Day of Yoga

“The Prime Minister left for the US on Tuesday carrying the message of peace but a corner of India (Manipur) is burning. People are unhappy at his continued silence and the absence of any improvement in the ground situation since May 3.”

New Delhi: The apex body of 36 civil society organisations in Manipur protested against Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s decision to lead a special yoga session at the UN headquarters in New York and boycotted the International Day of Yoga on Wednesday, June 21.

According to The Telegraph, Romeshwar Waikhwa, president of the Thoubal Apunba Lup, said that the protest was organised because the prime minister held the special yoga session “without considering the suffering of the people of Manipur since May 3”.

“We don’t need yoga in Manipur now. We need peace over yoga now because of the immense suffering of our people,” he said.

Over 300 people participated in the protest, according to The Telegraph, and several people displayed placards that were critical of Modi. The hour-long protest began at 8 am at the Thoubal Melaground, about 20 km from Imphal, according to reports.

Effigies of Modi, Union home minister Amit Shah and chief minister N. Biren Singh were burnt, with the protesters criticising them for their failure to control the situation in Manipur.

Prime Minister Modi’s silence on Manipur, where ethnic clashes have killed more than 130 people, has enraged the residents of the state. On Sunday, the prime minister’s ‘Mann Ki Baat’ radio programme was boycotted and some people even destroyed transistors to protest against Modi’s continued silence.

Waikhwa told The Telegraph that the people of Manipur “wanted the state and central governments to intervene and restore normality”. “The Prime Minister left for the US on Tuesday carrying the message of peace but a corner of India (Manipur) is burning. People are unhappy at his continued silence and the absence of any improvement in the ground situation since May 3,” he said.

The state government did not officially mark the day, in view of violence.

Maldives Assures ‘Swift’ Justice After Protestors Storm Yoga Day Event

Minister Ahmed Mahloof claimed that the storming of the event was backed by the opposition Progressive Party of Maldives and Jamiyyath Salaf, an Islamist organisation.

New Delhi: After the main International Yoga Day event, co-organised by the Indian high commission’s cultural centre, was stormed by a protesting mob, the Maldives government has launched multiple investigations and assured the perpetrators would be punished “swiftly”.

On Tuesday morning, the Indian high commissioner Munu Mahawar and his counterparts from Bangladesh and the United Kingdom were at an event to mark international yoga day at the Maldivian capital’s National Stadium.

Since the event was jointly organised by a Maldivian ministry and the Indian Cultural centre, it was also attended by Minister of Youth, Sports & Community Empowerment Ahmed Mahloof and foreign secretary Ahmed Latheef.

As per local media reports and witnesses, there had been protestors outside the venue before the event started, with placards claiming that Yoga was against the tenets of Islam. In a worrying turn of events, the protestors breached the security ring and interrupted the event. 

The mob vandalised yoga accessories and banners – and threatened participants. However, nobody was reported to be seriously injured.

After the protestors stormed into the stadium, more police reinforcements arrived to keep a physical distance between the event participants and the protestors. Police also used tear gas against the mob who disrupted the diplomatic function.

Maldivian President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih asserted that the matter was being seriously investigated and the perpetrators would be “swiftly brought before the law”.

In the evening, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that the Maldives government “strongly condemns the violent acts perpetrated by a group of individuals targeting the participants, including members of the diplomatic community”.

“Such malicious acts of violence aimed at disrupting public safety and undermining security of individuals and the diplomatic corps will not be tolerated,” said the ministry.

The statement also noted that International Yoga Day has been celebrated annually in the Maldives since 2015. “The United Nations declared the day as International Day of Yoga by consensus on 11 December 2014, through a resolution which was co-sponsored by a record of 177 countries, including the Maldives,” it said.

The foreign affairs ministry referred to the original support for Yoga day as Abdulla Yameen had been in power in 2015, when the Maldives had co-sponsored the resolution in the United Nations.

Out of power, Yameen is now spearheading the opposition’s ‘India Out’ campaign that is aimed at cornering the Maldives government by targeting its close relations with New Delhi. The opposition. led by Yameen’s Progressive Party of Maldives (PPM), has repeatedly claimed that India has deployed its military in the Indian Ocean archipelago nation. The Maldives government has strenuously denied the allegation.

At a meeting chaired by President Solih, the Maldives cabinet formed a new ministerial panel “to further look into the matter”.

So far, Maldives Police announced that six men had been taken into custody as they launched a “high priority” investigation through the Serious and Organised Crime Department of the Crime Investigation Command. “Perpetrators had sought to incite fear by forcefully entering, destroying property and attempting to assault participants of the event,” said the statement.

The police are also undertaking an internal review as there were concerns that the security provided was inadequate.

The Election Commission also warned that if the police investigation shows the involvement of a political party, action will be taken “under Article 49 of the Political Parties Act, with reference to Article 45 of the Act”. The legislation imposes fines of up to 75,000 Ruffiya for “misconduct”.

According to Maldivian media, the police statement had said that the initial probe had found that some of the items used by the mob had come from the office of the PPM.

In an interview with the Raajje television channel, minister Mahloof claimed that the storming of the event was backed by PPM and Jamiyyath Salaf, an Islamist organisation.

“This is a very lowly act, which should not have taken place. It is absolutely unacceptable. This is not a religious activity. It is an exercise. This day has been celebrated before, including in President Yameen’s administration. Thus, there is no reason it should become haram now,” he said.

The PPM condemned the incident and told local media that they were investigating whether the protestors used the same flags as brandished at a recent opposition rally.

PPM’s coalition ally, the People’s National Congress (PNC), claimed that the government had staged the incident to cast blame on the opposition.

“How else could a group of people storm the Galolhu Stadium. For example, authorities have stopped peaceful activities planned by PPM based on the assumption violence may take place,” said PNC leader Abdul Raheem Abdulla ‘Adhurey’.

Meanwhile, Jamiyyath Salaf also dismissed the charges by the Maldivian minister, terming it as an act to incite hatred against the group. “The allegations against us by Minister Mahloof are false. We condemn it in the harshest terms. The allegation made with complete disregard for facts is a dangerous allegation. The sole purpose is to incite hatred towards this organisation among members of the general public,” said the group.

Earlier, the venue of the yoga day function had to be changed to the National Stadium at the last moment. It was earlier scheduled to be held at Rasfannu artificial beach, but the opposition-dominated Male City Council cancelled the permit on Monday on the grounds of complaints by residents.

A local religious organisation Ilmuveringe Gulhun had also previously sent a letter to the Ministry of Islamic Affairs to demand that the event be cancelled as Yoga is a “dangerous thing against Islam and the Maldivian Constitution under the name of exercise”.

At the Heart of Yoga Is Respect for All Creatures – and All Faiths

As another International Day of Yoga nears its end, it is important to assimilate that the ancient science is not just about physical postures or a desire to possess a healthy body.

Paramhansa Yogananda, an icon in Indian spiritual history, was seated with his guru at the Serampore ashram when a mosquito dug a poisonous hypodermic needle into his thigh. Yogananda automatically raised his hand to strike a fatal blow at the mosquito.

He halted his hand almost as quickly though. The young Yogananda suddenly remembered one of Patanjali’s yoga aphorisms – on ahimsa.

“Why don’t you finish the job?” asked his guru, Swami Yukteshwar, whose ashram it was.

A perplexed Yogananda, who literally worshipped his guru, asked: “Master! Do you advocate taking life?”

“No, but the deathblow had already struck your mind,” came the cryptic reply.

Yogananda admitted he didn’t understand what the guru was saying.

Yukteshwar then explained a profound truth of yoga: “Patanjali’s meaning was the removal of the desire to kill. This world is inconveniently arranged for a literal practice of ahimsa. Man may be compelled to exterminate harmful creatures. He is not under similar compulsion to feel anger or animosity. All forms of life have equal right to the air of maya. The saint who uncovers the secret of creation will be in harmony with its countless bewildering expressions. All men may approach that understanding who curb the inner passion for destruction.”

As another International Day of the Yoga nears its end, it is important to assimilate that the ancient science is not just about physical postures or a desire to possess a healthy body. For those wanting to embrace yogic principles, a healthy body must be accompanied by an equally healthy mind.

This is something that both ancient sages and later yoga gurus have repeatedly stressed. 

Also read: As Modi Dreams of Becoming World’s Yoga Guru, Where Are India’s Yoga Dolls?

As Swami Bhaskarananda of Ramakrishna Mission underlined, spiritual seekers should avoid killing or committing violence. Even the thought of harming someone, Yogananda’s guru pointed out, is repugnant. “Killing or destroying other lives is caused by extreme selfishness, uncontrolled rage, or animal impulses,” said Swami Bhaskarananda.

“Killing reduces a person to the level of a beast.”

He added: “People with selfish motives who kill innocent people are murderers, and will be punished for their crimes.”

PM Narendra Modi in Mysuru for the Eighth International Yoga Day celebrations. Photo: Twitter/@narendramodi

Patanjali himself emphasised that if one wished to counter hatred or malice, it was important to be friendly and compassionate to all. “We should not be obsessed with finding faults in others. We should try to ignore the faults of others by thinking that everyone – no matter how bad – must have some good qualities also.”

Spiritual masters repeatedly stress the need to forego greed, anger, jealousy, hatred, lust and arrogance if one is truly devoted to god and wants to progress spiritually. Sarada Devi, the consort of Ramakrishna, went to the extent of saying: “If you want peace of mind, don’t find fault with others, but find fault rather with yourself.”

This is one reason why Sri Chandrasekharendra Saraswati, the 68th Pontiff of the Kamakoti Pitam at Kanchi (Kancheepuram), who undoubtedly was one of the most revered sages of modern times, never spoke ill of others even if he felt they had done things he did not approve of. While speaking about different religions, he told a gathering in Kumbakonam in April 1953: “The Muslims who came to India were no doubt guilty of excesses and conversions, but once they settled down to rule and shoulder responsibility, they learned to treat all citizens alike irrespective of whether one was a Hindu or a Muslim. Some of their rulers were even better than Hindu rulers.”

Also read: The Evolution of ‘Woke Yoga’ as a Branding Strategy

Also, in 1964, when the Pope was expected to visit Bombay, the Hindu Mahasabha planned to show black flags in protest. The Kanchi Mahaperiyava, as he was widely known, urged the Mahasabha to treat leaders of other religions with respect and not to show hatred.

This is also why Mahatma Gandhi, who was both a political leader and a spiritual persona, not only placed so much emphasis on non-violence but fully respected all religions even as he was literally married to the Bhagwad Gita. 

Although a devout Hindu, Gandhi was highly displeased when he heard about Hindu-Muslim riots in Ajmer in December 1947, a month before he was assassinated. “This is a shameful affair,” he said. “Let us pray to God to give us wisdom so that we do not destroy Hinduism by our conduct. It cannot do any good to destroy it by going against the Muslims. Man was not made by God to live through killing others. If we wish to live, we must let others live.”

Mahatma Gandhi. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

The same day, addressing a prayer meeting, Gandhi – who learnt Kriya Yoga from Paramhansa Yogananda – explained why he had certain verses read out from the Koran. “These verses are ancient, composed by the Holy Prophet 13 centuries ago. The extract we recite are considered sublime. Their very reading bestows merit on the reader. It is good to know their meaning but even without knowing it, correct recitation itself is of great value. In substance, these verses in Arabic are a prayer to God. They say: God is one and the same, by whatever name we call Him.”

Swami Vivekananda, the poster boy of the Hindu right and one of India’s greatest yogis, paid equal respect to all faiths, underlining that there have been men good and able in every religion, thus making the religion to which they belonged worthy of respect; as there are such people in every religion, there ought to be no hatred for any sect. Hatred, he made it clear, impedes the course of Bhakti

Like Mahatma Gandhi later, Vivekananda held the Prophet in high regards. “The ancient message of Krishna is one harmonising three – Buddha’s, Christ’s and Mohammed’s,” he said in a talk delivered in San Francisco in March 1900. Even as he criticised some Muslims for killing others in the name of Islam, Vivekananda described Mohammed as “the great Arabian prophet” and credited him for preaching “perfect equality”.

No religion, he underlined a month earlier in California, should be blamed for devilry. “No religion ever persecuted men; no religion ever burnt witches; no religion ever did any of these things. What then incited people to do these things? Politics, but never religion, and if such politics takes the name of religion, whose fault is that?”

Indian yogic and spiritual masters have been very clear in their thinking. Hating anyone, particularly any other religion, was a major no-no. They considered even unkindness – forget inflicting cruelty on others – a spiritual disease. They forbid yogis from even allowing their voice to be harsh out of anger or vengefulness. 

Shri Nimishananda, a respected teacher of yoga meditation, advises that those on the spiritual path must wake up every morning with a positive thought: “May I be forgotten for the harm I am knowingly or unknowingly causing other beings. Today, let my thoughts, feelings, words or actions cause no harm to anybody.”

It is in this background that one must judge the true yogis and spiritual seekers around us. Yoga and spirituality and hatred and violence cannot sail in the same boat.

M.R. Narayan Swamy is a veteran journalist.

Bound to No Rules, Modi’s Yoga Day Maintains Its Lawless Asana

Trained practitioners warn an unregulated Yoga scenario is making people ill. The Indian government is aware – yet continues to postpone regulation.

New Delhi: Prime Minister Narendra Modi led the observance of the eighth International Yoga Day from Mysuru early this morning. He, his colleagues in the Cabinet and in the Bharatiya Janata Party all set out to mark the occasion in various parts of the country – reviving an annual ritual that had to take a break in the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Yoga is one of the five systems of alternative Indian medicine under India’s AYUSH efforts, including via its Ministry of AYUSH. ‘AYUSH’ stands for ‘Ayurveda, Yoga, Unani, Siddha and naturopathy, and Homoeopathy’. Yoga alone among them is yet to be regulated under any Act of Parliament, however. All other systems are governed by the National Commission for Indian System of Medicine (NCISM) Act 2020.

Yoga and naturopathy are taught at the undergraduate level in 70 medical colleges in 14 states. The Mangalore University in Karnataka first floated this course in 1989. Today, these subjects are also taught at the postgraduate level.

The institutes that have these courses aren’t on the fringe. The National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences also offers PhD courses on the topic. Those who take these courses ‘treat’ patients without any pharmacological interventions.

Despite this history of formal training, Yoga and naturopathy practitioners aren’t required by a national Act to register before they start practising. So no one who has completed anything between a full-time course to a few weeks’ certificate course – or hasn’t studied anything at all – can be held liable for practising without a licence.

Seventeen states have passed their own registration laws – but in the absence of a national Act, a practitioner registered in one state can’t practise in another, so the effect of the registrations is uneven.

The remaining states don’t have any regulations in any case – which could allow “a number of quack practitioners” to mushroom “with the growing demand for Yoga and naturopathy clinical practice, putting the public at large at risk of malpractice and bad health,” a Parliamentary committee had warned in November 2019.

The Indian Naturopathy and Yoga Graduates’ Medical Association (INYGMA) has been aware of these ill-effects in the course of its work. Its president Naveen Visweswaraiah and vice-president Rajesh Kumar Singh said they encounter people almost every day with a condition made worse by misguided guidance from an unregistered practitioner.

“If a person with hypertension practises Kapalbhati, her blood pressure will shoot up,” Visweswaraiah told The Wire Science. She “may also get a stroke – but the untrained or insufficiently-trained Yoga practitioners don’t tell this to people.”

Similarly, Bhastrika – also known as hyperventilation – can trigger seizures in those who suffer from epilepsy, he said. “Now when [a person suffering from seizures] comes to us, we do make her do Bhastrika and also carry out an electroencephalogram investigation, so that we know which part of the brain is creating the problem.”

“But we do this in the extremely controlled settings of a lab. If an [undiagnosed] patient is sitting in a Yoga class, she can actually get a seizure because of Bhastrika. She can also die. And people will think she died just like that,” he added.

Singh, the vice-president, said, “There are centres which distribute brochures claiming 100% treatment of a disease with Yoga, when it might not be possible in that condition. All this is happening and we, the trained doctors, are helpless.”

The fundamentals are not difficult to understand, both Visweswaraiah and Singh said. They compared Yoga to a drug: just as a drug has contraindications and dose limits, so does the practice of Yoga. ‘More is better’ doesn’t work and is often harmful.

But in the absence of registration – leave alone a law governing the practice of Yoga – it’s not possible to discuss dosage, indications and side-effects.

The UK, the US and Australia have been reporting the adverse effects of Yoga practice. But India, the Vishwaguru that gave the world Yoga, is not interested in regulating its practice –  both as a fitness regimen and as a medicinal system.

Also read: Bad Medicine, Fake History, Postcolonial Complicity: Ayurveda in the Time of COVID

Moving goalposts

The Indian government might disagree with this assessment, however. (AYUSH ministry secretary Rajesh Kotecha is yet to respond to a list of questions The Wire Science had sent him.) This is because the government has been kicking the Yoga regulation can down the road for eight years.

Narendra Modi became India’s prime minister for the first time in May 2014, and by December, had transformed the Department of AYUSH into a Union ministry. But in August that year, the department shot off a letter to the health secretaries of all states that the Union government was planning to regulate the education and practice of Yoga under the same Act that covered all other alternative systems.

This was the Indian Medical Central Council Act 1970. But when the government replaced this Act with the NCISM Act six years later (with no significant progress in the interregnum), the latter had no scope to regulate Yoga and naturopathy.

The government’s rationale, provided to a standing committee that evaluated the NCISM Bill: Yoga and naturopathy are “drugless” systems while the other AYUSH systems are drugful, so they couldn’t be regulated by the same Bill.

“The committee is not at all convinced by the reasons given by the ministry,” committee members wrote in their report, which concluded with a recommendation to include a specific clause in the same Bill for Yoga and naturopathy.

File image of PM Narendra Modi on an earlier Yoga Day. Photo: Reuters

The AYUSH ministry ignored this recommendation. It also ignored a 2017 NITI Aayog report which said, “Given the increasing recognition for [Yoga and naturopathy] in potentially making an important contribution towards health promotion, well-being and disease prevention, we have recommended their inclusion in the NCISM.”

Indeed, the AYUSH ministry has veritably overlooked the recommendations of a wealth of reports. More than 50 MPs cutting across party lines wrote to Prime Minister Modi in 2020 asking him to regulate the practice of Yoga and naturopathy. INYGMA has also appeared before several government committees and made representations to the AYUSH ministry.

(The Wire Science has copies of all the relevant reports and the letters by some of the MPs.)

A Bill for Yoga

In a judgement dated February 3, 2022, the Kalaburagi bench of the Karnataka high court asked the Union Ministry of AYUSH to respond to a representation by a Girish Patil within three months. Patil, a Yoga and naturopathy practitioner, had approached the court seeking limits on the practice of Yoga.

The Union ministry wrote to Patil on May 19, 2022, saying, “A [separate] Bill with respect to regulating and standardising the education and practise of Yoga and Naturopathy is under consideration in this Ministry.”

The same ministry had told a Parliamentary committee three years earlier that it had decided to not have a separate Bill “​​to empower the existing mechanism of National Board for Promotion and Development of Yoga and Naturopathy under Ministry of AYUSH to strengthen the aspects of regulating education and practice of Yoga and naturopathy”.

“It is a lollipop that has been served to us for ages now,” INYGMA’s Kumar said. “They have never shared a draft [of this Bill]” nor specified “which government board or committee recommended to them that a separate Bill was needed.”

If the ministry had been serious, Kumar added, it would have at least consulted INYGMA and other similar groups, since they have been fighting for regulations for almost a decade under the Modi government.

Kumar himself doesn’t want a separate Bill – just like the Parliamentary committee didn’t. Their reason is that such a thing would require a separate commission to monitor its implementation, which in turn would have significant financial implications for a sector with a population lower than 3,000.

In its reply to Patil, the ministry also said that Yoga and naturopathy were not fit to be considered Indian ‘systems of medicine’’ because, again, they are drugless. This is a strange argument – especially since Prime Minister Modi has made Yoga a staple of his message of national pride.

This said, the AYUSH ministry created a ‘Yoga Certification Board’ through a simple communiqué in 2018. This board introduced multiple certificate courses ranging from a few hours to a couple weeks. The courses have no prerequisite qualifications except graduation from high school.

“This is like certifying quacks even if they don’t become doctors,” Visweswaraiah said.

In its courses, the board isn’t very different from other centres around the country that offer similar benefits – and all of them still function beyond the remit of a law or policy that specifies what is good Yoga and what isn’t. This in turn keeps the spotlight on the absence of such law or policy and the Indian government’s reluctance to regular Yoga.

Indeed, Prime Minister Modi used the first and second Yoga Days to build soft power for India and included other countries in its observance. But if Yoga practitioners are demanding something as basic as regulation on the eighth Yoga Day, it’s hard to believe the difficulties lie in framing the text for a government as shrewd as the current one.

Note: This article has been updated since publication with two corrections – on the date the Union ministry wrote to Girish Patil and the nature of the investigation carried out by the INYGMA on some patients.

Pragya Singh Thakur to Deliver Yoga Day Lecture at Lok Sabha Event

In 2019, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had then said he will never forgive Thakur for insulting Mahatma Gandhi.

New Delhi: BJP MP Pragya Singh Thakur will deliver a lecture online to other parliamentarians at an event organised by the Lok Sabha Secretariat to mark International Yoga Day on June 21, according to an official notification.

A tentative schedule notified by the LS Secretariat has listed Thakur’s lecture on “Yoga: A Way of Life” at 12 pm.

“Members are informed that celebration of International Day of Yoga is being organized by PRIDE, Lok Sabha Secretariat in online mode on 21st June, 2021. The celebration will consist of various practical sessions and lectures on various aspects of significance of Yoga in current situation,” the official bulletin said.

Before her, BJP MP Sumedhanand Saraswati from Rajasthan’s Sikar is scheduled to hold a session on meditation.

Thakur is one of the seven accused in the case of the 2008 Malegaon blast, in which six people were killed and 100 were injured. Earlier this year, after failing to remain present in the court multiple times, she appeared in court and was granted exemption from regular appearance by a special National Investigation Agency court in Mumbai.

In May 2019, Thakur had called Mahatma Gandhi’s assassin Nathuram Godse “a true patriot” in the run up to the Lok Sabha polls.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had then said he will never forgive Thakur for insulting Mahatma Gandhi and then Bharatiya Janata Party president Amit Shah announced that the party would take disciplinary action against her in 10 days.

Congress leader Manickam Tagore has taken to Twitter over Thakur being slotted for the lecture, asking if Modi has had a change of heart, considering that the Yoga Day project is a flagship effort by his government.


Several others have commented on how the decision reflects on the Modi government.

Last year, during the first wave of the pandemic Thakur had said reciting the Hanuman Chalisa five times a day until August 5 will “rid the world of the coronavirus pandemic”.

What it Means to Stay at Home on International Yoga Day 2020

Typically, promoters of a monolithic, ahistorical, essentialised idea of yoga are ignorant of the actual daily life of the early Vedic culture.

The International Day of Yoga (IDY) is now in its fifth year. But 2020 sees an interesting twist. Due to COVID-19, the theme for this year is “Yoga for Health – Yoga at Home”.

Instead of 50,000 people all coming together with Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a park or along a boulevard, participants are urged to stay at home. As a result there are countless ways to get involved online and also learn through many instructional videos. One of the more interesting social media hashtags to appear alongside #IDY2020 #StayAtHome this year is #ReturnToNature. The marketing of yoga involves an indelible sentiment that yoga represents the epitome of balance, harmony and sustainability in tune with nature.

In an article published by the Yoga Journal, Puravi Joshi explains the “true meaning of yoga,” which includes the idea that “Yoga is estimated to be at least 5,000 years old, originating in the Indus Valley Civilization in India.” Also, “True yoga isn’t just a workout. It is an ancient Indian philosophy espousing an eight-limbed approach to conscious living.”

The problems with these assertions are that they are ultimately articles of faith. They are regrettably intellectually lazy and disingenuous. They also potentially lend support to the Hindu nationalist interpretation of South Asia’s deeper history. It conflates the idea that Patañjali’s Aṣṭhāṅga Yoga is 5,000 years old and that it originated in the Indus Valley culture. Both are overdetermined and to the best of our knowledge, false.

Yet, through the logic of regressive identitarianism and the fact that it is a woman of Indian origin saying these things then the validity of these truth claims are buttressed through the precepts of Critical Race Theory and its South Asian sub-set, Desi Crit. Yoga is increasingly incorporated into social justice movements. This includes learning about how to become a “woke Hindu.” Yoga can supposedly assuage the perceived ongoing violence of settler colonialism and White supremacy that leave many wounds and voids.

How can yoga assuage settler colonialism and white supremacy?

One glaring issue is the way in which issues related to caste-based politics and representation are blind sided. The rush to instrumentalise yoga to fight all forms of oppression is seemingly geographically bound along with its promulgators. How can yoga be used to create an egalitarian society where members of marginalised communities in India and amongst the diaspora are not oppressed by those higher up the varṇa-jātī system? The yogic way of life is premised by adhering to varṇa-āśrama-dharma.

The traditional concept of a yogic way of life is underwritten by caste-based issues. Surgical removal of this core component while keeping “traditional yoga” relevant in today’s woke economy seems difficult to achieve.

While yoga might help address the settler-colonial issues in North America, how it might be applied in India is often left unsaid. As Melissa Heather explains, the issue is a European theft and biological coercion to create the artifice of a white, fit, flexible, female body as iconic of the yogic body, and that there is a moral imperative to adjust these issues. Yet, when institutionalising a modern yogic way of life it is imagined to be built upon a system that itself, is “internalized the value system of settler colonialism also perpetuates this system by branding yoga as a product that if bought will make one feel happy and peaceful, and be a better, more likeable person (in addition to skinnier, flexible and more beautiful). As such, yoga has become a willing accomplice in perpetuating the capitalist consumer culture that is dependent on extracting resources from stolen indigenous land.”

Where does fault lie?

It would seem that the Indian government and its local yoga industry is equally complicit in perpetuating capitalist consumer culture through stretching its meaning to capacity. Take, for example, how all ailments are solvable through yoga. How is it possible that yoga (whatever we imagine it to mean) can solve seemingly every problem humanity faces? Yet many people share and support this sentiment, for better or for worse.

For instance, here are a few prime examples: “Yoga creates lot of great vibrations in the people to make them to develop and change all their Bad things into the Good things.” What, precisely, are “great vibrations” and what is the difference between “Bad” and “Good” things? Who decides what is good and bad? We learn, that “Yoga changes the mind of the people to do every good task in the Country and stop every bad activity in the Country.” How precisely are minds recalibrated to know what is good for the country?

§

The irony of this situation is that Joshi’s version of history is a popular peoples version that has been filtered through so many lenses, beginning with German Romanticism and the colonial era of Indological essentialism, through to the post-colonial, consumerist, popularist imagination that runs on the uncritical idea that “Yoga is 5,000 years old.”

And since we have a growing body of evidence to show that postural yoga’s origins do not really go back further than the 11th century, as Jason Birch discusses, asserting a later date can result in simply being labelled, ‘racist,’ no matter what evidence is available. This is because one might be oppressing another’s lived experience of their cultural heritage. Regardless of whether it is historiographically correct or supported by textual evidence. This is evident in Joshi’s assertion, that “But if I’m honest, I sometimes find myself resentful of the fact that yoga is infrequently seen for its original purpose and meaning.”

Also read: A Yogi’s Quest to Popularise Transcendental Meditation

Now, just what is the original purpose and meaning of yoga? While yoga’s semantic ground zero is popularly considered to be the later upanishadic (from the Brihadāraṇyaka and Kaṭha Upaniṣad-s) idea related to the union between the macrocosm and microcosm the earliest attested meaning of “yoga” is located in the Ṛgveda.

Why do many people stop short of using the earliest meaning of yoga? We know that early Vedic life oscillated between periods of seasonal movement (yoga, “harnessing”)  – for warfare, cattle raids, and shifts to new pastures  – and times of settled peace (kṣema). Jarrod Whitaker explains it best:

R̥gvedic poet-priests clearly propagate a violent masculine ideology — a R̥gvedic warrior ethic — wherein all males, whether young or old, become real men by participating in the ritual tradition and by being strong, tough, and dominant. Of course, ritual participants value generosity, protection, benevolence, and poetic knowledge, among other qualities. Nevertheless, we have seen that R̥gvedic poets consistently project animage of themselves and their community that is shot through with notions of conflict and competition for resources.

While yoga does refer to uniting or joining things together, this is only one part of the context. Typically, promoters of a monolithic, ahistorical, essentialised idea of yoga are ignorant of the actual daily life of the early Vedic culture. Or they have an agenda to promote an idea that everyone was vegetarian, Hindu, and did yoga, all the time. Why this is important to detail is that they promote a vague enough concept of a Vedic lifestyle, or, at least, a return to an imagined Vedic lifestyle as necessary to solve the problems of the 21st century. One example is the ISKCON guru, Radhanath Swami, who asserts, that “The underlying cause of all the pollution in the world is polluted consciousness.” And that, “the Vedic solution is something very different. And that is to find substantial satisfaction within ‘simple living and high thinking.’”

When we think or talk about IDY or “Yoga” more broadly, what exactly are we referring to? One wonders what the early Rigvedic people would have done in the face of COVID-19 quarantine restrictions?

§

Here we see a curious rhetorical strategy. A “Yoga lifestyle,” whatever that practicably means, is now spliced within health, development, and sustainability contexts. In 2018, Narendra Modi explained that yoga is a path to wellness and not simply a fitness regime, and that a “Yoga lifestyle” is the most sustainable way of life that everyone on the planet ought to adopt. This coercion through a perceived moral imperative is fascinating. Especially how it extends through assertions, such that “Yoga makes the connection between the Health protection as well as Development of the Sustainable Health.”

How does it do this? And what is a Yogic Lifestyle? The answer is seemingly as circular as one’s breathing ought to be. Apparently “A yogic lifestyle involves consciously shaping our attitudes, habits, and general ways of life to be more congruent with the philosophies, principles, morals, and ethics of yoga.”

Of course the concepts of Yoga today have moved on from what they originally were, yet there is often very little appreciation for the imagined pillars of a what many describe as a “classical yoga” system that underpins many assertions about how to live a supposedly sustainable yogic lifestyle. For instance, we are told that the first two limbs of the eight-limbed (ashtanga) yoga system are the moral/ethical principles otherwise known as the yamas and niyamas. Yet, how are they ethical and moral? These concepts of non-violence, truthfulness, non-stealing, cleanliness, etc are not offered within the context of being a better person “in the world.” Or to be involved in somehow making the world a better a place through community service or somehow living a more sustainable lifestyle that only upper-middle class consumers can realistically afford.

It is ironic that the origins of a yoga lifestyle are in effect bereft of any idea of community or sustainability or development or wellness. In some ways, the original proto-yogis were part of a death cult, which had nothing to do with helping the downtrodden. The point is that the yamas and niyamas are part of system that is designed to reduce cognitive distortion and error. In this context error refers to all the ways that one can get distracted. If one is stealing, lying, cheating, living in a cluttered and dirty environment, etc then the chances of being in a mental space free from tension and diversion might be difficult to attain. And since the stated aim of the eight-limbed yoga is isolation (kaivalya) one wonders how that in any way can come to refer to community development or being “woke.” The classically-imagined concept of yoga that is promoted today as enigmatic of solving the world’s problems is about as opposite to this intention as is possible.

Also read: Why the Prime Minister and I Are Kindred Yoga Spirits

In a similar way, the concept of adopting a vegetarian diet is considered emblematic of an advancement in one’s progress. This shared sentiment sees the entanglement of different groups. For example, the Hindu Students Council is a coordinating group for Hindu students in North America. It is a concentrating hub for promoting Hindutva(-lite) ideology and is institutionally linked to the National Volunteer Corps (RSS) through its international branch, the Hindu Volunteer Corps (HSS). Yet, as “traditional knowledge keepers” and “stewards” who are equally interested in “tackling issues facing humanity – environmental protection, vegetarianism and animal rights, interfaith respect, LGBTQA+ rights, and feminism. These topics delved into the unique contributions that Hindu dharma can make in resolving existing fault lines in a progressive, sustainable manner,” they have chosen to erase the religiously-sanctioned omnivorous origins by asserting that “Hindus have a belief that the killing of any other human or animal is wrong (This information can be found in the Rigveda).”

§

Does being a “woke Hindu” mean erasing the uncomfortable bits of one’s heritage in a similar way to knocking down every statue regardless of who is represented?

§

Well, there is much to be found in the Rigveda. For instance, verse 10.86.14 has Indra explain to us that 15 to 20 oxen are cooked (pañcadaśa sākam pacanti viṁśatim) for him and that he only likes to eat the fatty meat (utāham admi pīva id ubhā kukṣī pṛṇanti). We don’t have to dig too far to see that the people, and their gods, who gave us the term “yoga” were actually very fond of barbecues. Maharishi Yagyavalkya says in the Shatapath Brahmana (3.1.2.21) that, “I eat beef because it is very soft and delicious (yājñavalkyo ‘śnāmyevāhamaṃsalaṃ cedbhavatīti).” Yet, as the Manu Smriti advises (5.45-50), the violence of killing animals should be avoided at 5.30 and 5.56. However, not only is the consumption of meat (and other items) permissible, these acts are not considered “sinful.” As Brahma supposedly created both the eaters and the eatables. Also, the Vashistha Dharmasutra (11.34) explains, that one would go to hell for not consuming meat as part of “shraddha” or worship (tāvat narakam).

Yet, it is explained that to “Eat like a yogi” requires adhering to a vegetarian or vegan diet, which assuredly should be “organic, minimally processed, in season, and locally-grown.” This is perhaps beyond the price point of many aspiring yogis.

Apparently “Yoga makes the people to strengthen the Coordination of the World,” and “Yoga spreads peace and Honor with better development and Growth of all the activities in the World,” and “Yoga makes the connection between the Health protection as well as Development of the Sustainable Health.” It’s about as digestible a word salad as might be offered at the next yoga retreat.

Also read: ‘International Day of Yoga’ Will Not Solve Climate Change. Here’s Why

However, this 21st-century reinterpretation of a Vedic lifestyle seems diametrically opposed to the picture presented in the original texts that are to be completely consumed upon risk of excommunication.  The repetitive use of words building from the roots √yudh-, √yuj, and √ (refer to war, movement, etc) and √kṣi (etc) that refers to intervals of settled life (it is not appropriate to translate kṣema as “peace” in the way śānti means “peace”) means that in the many couplings of yoga and kṣema point to the idea that the earliest Vedic “lifestyle” consisted of performing action to accrue more resources, fighting to protect one’s own resources, which was interspersed with intermittent periods of rest and movement that typifies a nomadic lifestyle and the securing of borders. All of which puts an interesting spin on #IDY2020 and its theme of #StayAtHome.

Patrick McCartney, PhD, is a Research Affiliate at the Anthropological Institute at Nanzan University, Nagoya, Japan. He is trained in archaeology, anthropology, sociology, and historical linguistics. His research agenda focuses on charting the biographies of Yoga, Sanskrit, and Buddhism through a frame that includes the politics of imagination, the sociology of spirituality, the anthropology of religion, and the economics of desire. His social media handle is Patrick McCartney

Why the Prime Minister and I Are Kindred Yoga Spirits

We both do the lotus pose or padmasana though frankly, we prefer the half padmasana. Why cross your legs and place both feet on both thighs when you can close your eyes and look equally meditative with half the effort?

I’m convinced Prime Minister Narendra Modi and I have one thing in common: we both practise our version of yoga regularly and desperately want to be yogis. Sure, the prime minister encouraged the United Nations to declare June 21 as International Yoga Day and millions of Indians watch videos of Modi’s animated self perfectly executing various asanas, while I haven’t even managed to convince the husband to join me in a surya namaskar (sun salutation). Still, I believe Modi and I are kindred yoga spirits.

After perusing many videos and images of the prime minister doing yoga these past few years, I’m convinced we have the same favourite asanas (all beginner level – though who knows, he might show us a few new moves today). Like the prime minister, I can hold the thunderbolt pose or vajrasana as long as you need me to, though the prime minister is always better accessorised than me when he sits on his knees (think all white with an Indian tricolour scarf). From here we can fall back and execute a fairly competent supta vajrasana, but when we try a forward bend from this position, our bodies invariably lift off our heels of their own accord.

We both do the lotus pose or padmasana though frankly, between you and me, we prefer the half padmasana. Why cross your legs and place both feet on both thighs when you can close your eyes and look equally meditative with half the effort?

Modi and I both find it easy enough to go from the mountain pose or tadasana to the tree pose or vriksasana where we stand on one leg and raise our hands high over our head. This looks great in pictures too, and makes viewers believe we really know what we are doing.

I once executed this pose on a big rock near the edge of a cliff in the hill station of Matheran. My cousin, an ace photographer, ensured he positioned me so the setting sun fit perfectly between my raised arms.

Also read: ‘International Day of Yoga’ Will Not Solve Climate Change. Here’s Why

The prime minister and I struggle at the finish line in the spinal twist pose of ardha matsyendrasana (how on earth do people look all the way back there?); and our knees rarely touch the ground when we do the butterfly pose or the baddha konasana.

We can both do a mean cobra pose or bhujanasana and find it easier to do poses where you need to bend back rather than forward. We can even carry off a competent camel pose or ustrasana.

My ability to bend forward is impeded by my extremely stiff hamstring muscles and after years of practising yoga, I am still unable to touch my toes. My forehead has never made contact with my knees. Now that I think about it, have you ever seen the prime minister touch his toes?

The similarities go beyond favourite asanas. I’m convinced the prime minister and I both have body issues. Mine would require a separate column to discuss and as far as the prime minister goes, there are enough clues in the public domain. As any woman will tell you, wearing all black when you exercise – as the prime minister did in the slickly choreographed exercise and yoga video he released one year ago that became the source of countless memes – serves one purpose only. When Modi visited the Guruvayur Temple earlier this month, he sidestepped the bare chest (with a towel-if-you-must) dress code for men and wrapped his upper torso in yards of fabric.

The prime minister’s animated videos show a taller, fitter, younger, more muscular version of himself. His “improved” alter ego executes difficult asanas easily and with perfect posture.

Both the prime minister and I would do well to learn a lesson or two about body positivity from Dolly Singh, a plus-sized Mumbai woman who started practising yoga a few years ago and whose spectacular yoga videos feature her real, unfiltered self. Follow her on her Instagram account Yogaforall. “Your body is not your limit,” Singh is fond of saying. Dolly’s is as perfect a yoga body as I have ever seen.

Also read: The Good, Bad and the Ugly of Trapping ‘Pranayama’ Within Scientific Speak

The prime minister and I are both surrounded by more accomplished practitioners. Modi has a saffron-clad younger colleague who once said those who want to avoid yoga should leave India; I have a same-age pal whose display picture shows her executing the perfect crow or kākāsana pose. Though Modi’s colleague has the title of yogi, my friend could pip his moves any day. I would like to say more here but this gent has a proclivity to arrest journalists who dare to comment about him.

My yoga ideal is any woman, above the age of 60, who breezes through her daily quota of surya namaskars. The prime minister’s idol? I would guess it’s his close acquaintance, Baba Ramdev. In one video posted on YouTube, Ramdev accepts a dance challenge from actor Ranveer Singh at an Aaj Tak event. His accelerated “surya namaskar dance” is followed in quick succession by handstands, lunges, the scorpion pose and headstand – after which Ramdev flings Singh over his shoulder and twirls him around easily.

If the prime minister didn’t have the habit of making himself the face of every idea his government generates, he could have nominated a real yoga professional to execute his asana videos.

Still need more similarities to be convinced? No aerial yoga, equine yoga or cannabis yoga for us. The prime minister and I like our yoga old-fashioned and handed down to us from the pre-Vedic age. Both of us wouldn’t bat an eyelid if yoga was declared compulsory in schools.

Finally, you’ve seen that black-and-white picture of a former prime minister doing a headstand on a lawn, clad only in a pair of shorts? Yes, you guessed right: both the prime minister and I envy Jawaharlal Nehru.

Priya Ramani has been a writer and editor with Reuters, India Today, Indian Express and Mint.

‘International Day of Yoga’ Will Not Solve Climate Change. Here’s Why

The challenges of tackling climate change still remain mostly in the realm of politics and economic interests, rather than soft choices over culture and what to wear to a Yoga Day event.

The International Day of Yoga (IDY) is now in its fifth consecutive year. The theme for 2019, aptly enough, is climate action. The claim, this time around, is that a yogic lifestyle can help prevent climate change by healing humanity’s relationship with the earth.

In the words of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, a “yogic lifestyle” is not only a powerful instrument to tackle climate change through “changing our lifestyle and creating consciousness”, but also a path to wellness that will somehow make us better individuals in “thought, action, knowledge and devotion”.

However, India has a branding problem. Even though it is the home of yoga, it faces huge challenges when it comes to handling pollution.

The AYUSH Ministry, which oversees the standardisation of yoga on behalf of the government, adds further flourish by asserting that yoga is a practical discipline that develops one’s inherent power to achieve a balanced life that can be freed of stress, pain and disease. (Really? One could ask.) Is climate action simply in need of a personality transformation that can be brought about by a mix of standardised postures, breathing, chants and meditative moments? While undoubtedly, there is a case to be made for some benefits, the hard challenges of attenuating climate change still remain mostly in the realm of politics and economic interests, rather than soft choices over culture and what yoga pants to wear to an IDY event.

This is where the soft power approach of India appears. AYUSH’s Common Yoga Protocol purportedly represents the paragon of moral-political economies that can achieve the United Nations’ 17 sustainable development goals (SDGs) codified in Agenda 2030. This forms the rubric for assessing and motivating sustainable development across the economy, society and environment. While such social media campaigns exist, like #Tourism4SDGs and Sadhguru’s #Yoga4SDGs, their appearance hides the fact that many vulnerable groups are excluded and disadvantaged.

Also read: Ramdev’s Patanjali Stumbles After Riding High

Even in the domain of culture, the narrative used to create the demand for a yogic lifestyle is unsurprising. For one, yoga signifies a distinctly middle-class aspiration and performance of an “urban lifestyle.” Even though yogic lifestyles are packaged as paths to emancipation, their consumption only reinforces class disparities instead of offering an alternative.

Regardless of the increase in yoga activism, much of it is another opportunity to signal virtue. Whether the urban yogi is found in New York, London, Tokyo, Bangkok or Hanoi, the inherent spiritual narcissism does not necessarily mean the next ‘yogation‘ (yoga vacation) will include volunteering to save forests or resist the construction of large dams or #OccupySomething. A cursory glance at any number of yoga studio websites shows how they are often presented as urban oases that intensely focus on the consumer-self. This mature-saturation point of the global yoga industry demonstrates the intense competition for relevance. The unregulated spiritual marketplace enables yoga hybrids to avail themselves of a seemingly endless array of options.

While the self-proclaimed protectors of the supposedly “one, true yoga” denounce the heresy of such things as beer yoga, weed yoga, penguin yoga, SUP yoga, acro-yoga, death metal yoga, and so on, such appeals to purity and tradition are themselves founded on ahistorical narratives that essentialise and Orientalise yoga’s complex and dynamic history to a static monolith. This is a type of cultural appropriation which is as problematic as any of the hybrids listed above.

Yoga is an integral component of the wellness ideology of “self-care” which proposes that the world will be healed through the self-absorption and self-centredness of the atomised, individualised, docile consumer. However, the alienated and disaffected individual grappling with fast-paced urban living is more often than not investing in neoliberal goals of endless consumption, as opposed to any attempt at overthrowing the structural conditions that separate communities or unify them. This is, of course, regardless of any marketing ideal that promotes yoga as a catalyst for connection.

Yoga is a boundary. It does more to separate members of the in-group from the out-group than is recognised. “Self-care” also implies one is incomplete. Which in turn requires consumption of yoga to fix this and more perceived problems. This perpetual state of self-improvement and self-transformation is a central part of neoliberal ideology. It is also used to fuel economies through consumption of a yogic lifestyle that is promoted as a veritable cure-all, and which has the added benefit of being sustainable and ethical.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi doing yoga during the International Yoga Day, 2017. Credit: PTI

Representative image of Prime Minister Narendra Modi doing yoga. Photo: PTI

The urban yogini walking confidently down the street with their yoga mat and take-away coffee (in a re-useable cup) has become emblematic of the cosmopolitan ideal. This includes the preference for expensive organic, sustainable, ethical clothing and other products. A yogic lifestyle is presented as inherently sustainable and ecologically friendly. From this, an individual’s consumption and performance of “yogic ways of life” becomes part of a moral index. Every action is measured against the ethical performance of others through the reciprocal obligation of surveilling oneself and others while perceiving health as a duty, as opposed to a right.

In other words, the neoliberal sense of the self, who is marked by consumption, choice and freedoms, draws from the well of the market.

New metaphorical wells are now being dug in the fastest-growing sector of the global tourism industry — one which relates to ‘inner wellness’ tourism. Most of this growth is happening in Asia. This is because many government tourism agencies actively push neo-Orientalist narratives that play on the idea that Asia is the magical and mystical land of sages and yogis. This reinforces the stereotypes held dear by foreign as well as domestic tourists.

Transformational tourism” is considered by industry experts as an attempt to step beyond authentic travel by suggesting a deeper emotional level of connection with oneself, others and the world is possible. What better way to achieve this than through some form of ‘yogation’?

Also read: The ‘Do What You Love’ Mantra and Co-Option of a Laborious Work Culture

Categorised as niche tourism, this sector is amongst the fastest growing. Currently valued at $680 billion, it is expected to grow to $808 billion by 2020. It has a 15 percent share of the total tourism industry’s revenue and grows at more than twice as fast as the overall tourism industry with a compound annual growth rate of eight percent. However, even though international tourism accounts for roughly 10 percent of the world’s GDP, it also amounts for about eight percent of the global carbon supply.

If we travel, for whatever reason, we pollute. Even if it is to eat, pray, live, the capital of yoga Rishikesh has plumbing issues. No amount of yoga will help with this. As the annual number of people choosing to travel for inner wellness tourism and yoga-related transformational tourism rises, the necessity for living restrained, sustainable lives and reducing personal carbon footprints continues.

Perhaps, being able to reduce one’s footprint while traveling is one siddhi (yogic power) that really ought to be cultivated? Or, will yoga transform people’s ethical choices to travel locally instead of to the mystical, magical, sacred Yogaland that so many producers of yogations offer, inconveniently, on the othered side of the earth?

Patrick McCartney, PhD, is a JSPS Post-Doctoral fellow at the Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies at Kyoto University in Japan. Patrick explores the communication strategies involved in the politics of imagination, the sociology of spirituality, the anthropology of religion, and the economics of desire in relation to the imaginative consumption of global yoga. His current project focuses on the Japanese yoga industry in relation to global wellness tourism and can be followed at yogascapesinjapan.com.