Rijiju joins Yoga Day mass session in Bengal, cites spiritual legacy
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Union Parliamentary Affairs Minister Kiren Rijiju joined a mass yoga session in West Bengal on Sunday, 21 June 2026, marking the International Day of Yoga, and shared reflections from the ground quoting Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the spiritual significance of observing the day on Bengal's soil.
Context
Rijiju posted on X, quoting Prime Minister Modi's remarks at the event: 'योग दिवस के अवसर पर आज बंगाल में होना बहुत ही विशेष है' ('Being in Bengal on the occasion of Yoga Day today is very special'). The Prime Minister described Bengal as sacred ground — the birthplace of siddha saints such as Ramakrishna Paramahansa, the land from which Swami Vivekananda introduced yoga to the world, and the birthplace of Maharishi Aurobindo. Modi said the collective yoga experience on that same soil was giving 'a different spiritual sensation.'
The post was tagged #YogaForHealthyAgeing and #InternationalDayofYoga2026, the official themes for this year's observance, signalling the event's alignment with the UN-designated focus on yoga's role in healthy ageing.
Policy Backdrop
The International Day of Yoga was proposed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the UN General Assembly in 2014 and adopted by acclamation, with the first global observance held on 21 June 2015. Since then, successive central governments have treated the annual event as both a public-health initiative and a cultural-diplomacy exercise, organising mass sessions across Indian states and at Indian missions abroad.
Bengal carries particular symbolic weight in this narrative. Ramakrishna Paramahansa, the 19th-century mystic, and his foremost disciple Swami Vivekananda — who introduced yoga philosophy to Western audiences at the 1893 Parliament of the World's Religions in Chicago — are rooted in the state's spiritual tradition. Sri Aurobindo, born in Bengal in 1872, later developed the system of Integral Yoga and founded the Sri Aurobindo Ashram in Pondicherry.
Stakeholders and Impact
Choosing West Bengal as the venue for a high-profile central government Yoga Day event carries political and cultural dimensions. The state's deep association with the figures cited — Ramakrishna, Vivekananda, and Aurobindo — gives the occasion a resonance that extends beyond routine wellness programming. Yoga practitioners, students, and residents across the state participated in the mass session.
The invocation of Bengal's 19th- and 20th-century spiritual lineage by the Prime Minister — and amplified by a senior Union Minister — illustrates the broader pattern of linking centrally sponsored wellness campaigns to regional heritage, aimed at encouraging wider participation and local identification with the initiative.
What's Next
The scale of official events and mass yoga sessions across West Bengal on 21 June 2026 is expected to set a benchmark for state-level participation in coming years. Any follow-up parliamentary references to yoga promotion schemes or state-central coordination on wellness policy will be watched closely, as the government continues to position yoga at the intersection of public health and India's cultural outreach globally.