"Our objective is to make yoga the mantra of modern times. (The International Yoga Day) is a recognition that yoga is a civilisational heritage that originated in India," India's Consul General here Ambassador Dnyaneshwar Mulay told PTI ahead of the first International Day of Yoga to be commemorated on June 21.
Yoga, one of India's most significant cultural contributions to the world, will inundate the US on June 21 when hundreds of thousands of people will mark the day, with External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj presiding over the celebrations at the United Nations and Times Square.
Swaraj will lead a high-level delegation from June 20-22.
Apart from her participation at the UN headquarters on June 21, she is expected to attend the Annual Event of Yoga at Times Square, a lecture and demonstration of Yoga at the Hindu Temple Society of North America and at an event at Lincoln Centre featuring Sri Sri Ravi Shankar.
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Mulay said that an estimated 30,000 people are expected to attend the day-long Yoga celebrations at Times Square and about 6,000 at the talk by the spiritual leader hosted by chairman of the Global Citizen Forum industrialist B K Modi.
In addition, the Overseas Volunteers for Better India (OVBI) will be organising 'Yogathons' across 100 cities in the US that will again be attended by thousands of people.
Events have been planned in Washington, Boston, Ohio, New Jersey, San Francisco and other US cities as well by several Yoga studios, Indian-American organisations and temples, Mulay said.
He said the International Day of Yoga "will deepen and broaden the scope, meaning and significance of yoga for the US population and will also make people think about India and its connection with yoga.