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Ganga Yoga

People from 50 nations join hands in a historic declaration, perform ceremonies and new art of Ganga Yoga, clean Ganga by hand and say, “Ganga’s Rights are Our Rights.”

Rishikesh: Yogis from more than 50 nations joined hands today for a cleaner, greener Ganga and all the waters bodies of the world, during Parmarth Niketan’s world-famous annual International Yoga Festival.

As the day began, hundreds gathered on Parmarth Niketan’s ghats alongside the banks of the Ganga to perform the newly-developed art of Ganga Yoga, which was developed by American yogacharya, Laura Plumb, with the inspiration, blessings and teachings of Pujya Swami Chidanand Saraswatiji, President of Parmarth Niketan, Founder of Ganga Action Parivar and Co-Founder of the Global Interfaith WASH Alliance.

Laura explained: “Go with the Flow. Let Go & Let Ganga. Surrender to divine will. Open your heart and recognize its natural generosity. Let yourself be a river of love. Be the compassion we all seek in the world. Give and Forgive. Pujya Swamiji always says, “Ganga gives and she forgives.” Ask yourself, by Ganga’s example, what are you ready to forgive? How can forgiveness open the rivers of compassion in your own life? Ganga teaches us generosity of heart. She purifies our past, refreshes our soul, and carries us to the ocean of the heart. Through Ganga, we learn to be a river of love for the world.”

Afterwards, attendees held brightly-coloured flags representing their many countries, including Brazil, South Africa, the United States, France, Iran, Australia, Turkey, Japan and Russia and joined hands in a pledge to protect the Mother Ganga, their local rivers and water bodies and all the water bodies of the world. They sang songs in praise of Ganga, India’s National River, played Holi joyously with flower petals and powder in the colours of the sun and performed a water ceremony with prayers for water, sanitation and hygiene for all. Joy, ecstasy, overflowing peace and ebullience were felt by all.

Said HH Pujya Swami Chidanand Saraswatiji, “Yogis from around the world have come together today to declare that the River Ganga is a global treasure which should be kept in a clean, green, free-flowing state for all. Far too many travellers are seeing Mother Ganga’s waters tainted with sewage, trash and toxic chemicals. They are witnessing dry rocks where She once serenely flowed. Now is the time to plant trees, to stop polluting, to be the change. It’s something each one of us can so easily do, and if we all do this together, enormous transformations can be achieved. Today you are all now Yogis for Ganga!”

The participants expressed their love for Ganga, their commitment to Ganga and their devastation at seeing what is happening to Her waters. They could be heard expressing: “I am devastated to see that such a holy river, the Mother Ganga is being polluted by billions of litres of chemicals and sewage every day. This makes no sense to me. That is why I am here today. People should understand that the Ganga is in the hearts and minds of people everywhere. She must be seen and protected as part of our global heritage.”

To show their commitment against the millions of tons of solid waste which enter the Ganga and its tributaries every day, the international participants waded into the river to collect trash from the waters and from the banks. They then reassembled on the ghats of Parmarth Niketan, Rishikesh, to take a holy dip in the river they call, “Mother,” to the melodious sound of Vedic chanting by Parmarth Niketan’s young Rishikumars (Gurukul students).

Explained Sadhvi Bhagawatiji of Parmarth Niketan, “As we clean the banks of Mother Ganga, we are actually cleaning our own hearts, minds and souls. We are purifying ourselves through this action of service to the Mother Ganga. First, we give a bath to Mother Ganga, then we take our own holy baths.”

During the event, a historic “Yogi’s for Ganga Declaration” to Protect the Ganga River was endorsed by hundreds of participants. The Declaraton, was written by Western-born yogis who came together and said they wanted to impress upon the world the crucial role the Ganga River plays culturally and environmentally.

States the Declaration, “It is from the banks of the Ganga that the art and practice of yoga was born. Her waters have supported the growth of civilizations and have inspired poets, saints and sages. She is the lifeline for some 500 million people, as well as for countless species of plants and animals, some of which can be found no place else on this Earth. We, as travellers to and within India, expect Her waters to be clean and serene. We expect them to nourish us and to inspire us.Yet, we see rubbish mar Her banks and lyrical flow. We learn of billions of litres of sewage and toxic chemicals that are permitted to foul Her waters every day. In some places, we are startled to see that there is no Ganga at all, because Her waters have been diverted or extracted to the point in which there is nothing left but dry rocks and parched dreams.”

The declaration also calls for the protection of all rivers and sources of water worldwide.

Said Pujya Swami Chidanand Saraswatiji, “All rivers connect to the seas, which connect to all continents. Just as yoga is for everyone, so is the Ganga. Water means life. It is what builds societies and holds us all together. Without water, there can be no life. That is why all rivers in all nations must also be revered and protected.”

Said yogacharya, Laura Plumb of the United States, “Mother Ganga gives and gives like the most perfect of mothers, never expecting anything back in return. Yet, She is in great trouble, as are so many water sources world-wide, due to the poor choices of mankind. I have personally pledged to help not only Mother Ganga, but to try to ensure the rivers in my home area are also improved. This for me has become part of my spiritual practice, as important as my morning asanas, japa and meditation.”

Visit the International Yoga Festival website for more information >>