Political Yoga – Sunila Kalé and Christian Lee Novetzke

Ancient Futures

How closely connected are yoga and politics? Many people today try to keep them apart, but an ancient tradition sees yoga as politics. Although its theories might be distinct from yogic philosophies and mind-body disciplines, they’re nonetheless part of a broader understanding of what yoga means.

A new book called The Yoga of Power, by Sunila Kalé and Christian Lee Novetzke, unpacks the implications. Initially inspired by events such as a U.S. court case about whether yoga in schools was religious and the Hindu nationalist promotion of “yoga day”, their work studies texts from the Ṛg Veda onwards, showing how yoga describes the exertion of control. Together, we discuss (among other topics):

* The use of yoga-kṣema to refer to people’s welfare

* What links good governance to personal self-discipline

* How yogic ideas inspired anti-colonial resistance politics

* Why texts tell haṭha yogis to find well-governed lands

* Whether sun salutations are yogic or martial arts

We also talk about this film from 1928, in which the Raja of Aundh promotes sun salutations (as discussed in this article). You can find out more about Sunila’s work here, and Christian’s here – both are professors at the University of Washington.

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