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Shri Yogendra

Manibhai Haribhai Desai (1897 – 1989), known as (Shri) Yogendra was an Indian yoga guru,[2] author, poet, researcher[3] and was one of the important figures in the modern revival of Hatha Yoga, both in India and United States. He was the founder of The Yoga Institute, the oldest organized yoga centre in the world, established in 1918.[4][5] He is often referred as the Father of Modern Yoga Renaissance.[6][7] He was one of the figures responsible for reviving the practice of asanas and making yoga accessible to people other than renunciates.[8]


Yogendra
Gujarati: યોગેન્દ્ર
Yogendra in his early years, sitting in Siddhasana
Personal
Born
Manibhai Haribhai Desai

(1897-11-18)18 November 1897[1]
Died24 September 1989(1989-09-24) (aged 91)
ReligionHinduism
SpouseSita Devi (m.1927)
ChildrenJayadeva Yogendra, Vijayadev Yogendra
Parent
  • Haribhai Jivanji Desai (father)
Alma materAmalsad English School, near Surat
St. Xavier's College, Mumbai
Known forPioneering modern yoga
Pen nameMastamani
Founder ofThe Yoga Institute (1918)
Religious career
GuruParamahamsa Madhavdasji

Yogendra innovated modern methods to teach Yoga, initiating research in Yoga, particularly in the field of the Yoga therapy. He authored several books on yoga and started the journal Yoga in 1933. He was also a poet, writing under the pen name 'Mastamani'. He translated Rabindranath Tagore's Gitanjali into Gujarati.[3]

Biography

Early years

Yogendra was born as Manibhai Desai in an Anavil Brahmin family on 18 November 1897 in a village near Surat, Gujarat. He was affectionately called Mogha ("priceless one") in his childhood.[9] His father Haribhai Jivanji Desai was a school teacher. His mother died when he was three years old.[citation needed]

At the age of eighteen in 1916, after distinguishing himself in the Amalsad English School, Yogendra attended St. Xavier's College in Bombay. He felt homesick and fell into depression and lost his interest in studies. At the urging of his roommate, On 26 August 1916, Yogendra visited the Dharamshala of Paramahamsa Madhavadasaji at Madhav Baug, regardless of his robust suspicion of sannyasis and sadhus. However, in Paramahamsa ni Prasadi (1917),[10] he wrote that his misgivings disappeared "as our eyes met" and as it turns out, Madhavadasaji was equally struck by Yogendra's qualities as a capable disciple.[3]

 
Yogendra's guru, Paramahamsa Madhavdasji, c. 1930

After a period of courtship through letters, Yogendra left his college and went to Madhavadasaji's Ashram in Malsar, near Vadodara in late 1916. He received special attention and it was clear that he was being educated and groomed to be Madhavadasaji's successor. Yogendra learned Yoga, much of the teaching being on the practical and pragmatic use of Yoga and its application in sickness and suffering. His training in the Ashram was centered around yogic 'natural health cures' administered to patients in the ashram's sick ward. Yogendra left the Ashram after more than two years.[3]

Works

On 25 November 1918, Yogendra established The Yoga Institute at the residence of Dadabhai Naoroji at Versova Beach in Bombay (now Mumbai). A year later in 1919, Yogendra left for Europe and the United States, with the aim of popularizing Yoga and set up a branch of the institute, The Yoga Institute of America at Harriman in New York.[11] His system of asanas, which helped to create the modern yoga movement, was influenced by the physical culture of Europeans such as Max Müller.[12] Yogendra began the process of "domesticating" hatha yoga, seeking scientific evidence for yoga's health benefits. This helped to undo the negative image of yoga and asana practice.[13]

In US, among the people Yogendra met was Benedict Lust, one of the founders of naturopathic medicine. Benedict Lust saw the value of Hatha Yoga for his work and studied it with him. Yogendra stayed there working with a number of Avant-garde doctors such as John Harvey Kellogg and Benedict Lust. Along with the early experiments on Yoga, he finished his first books while in US, Light on Hatha Yoga and a volume on Rabindranath Tagore.[14]

He went back to India less than 5 years later, proceeding to go back to the USA, however thwarted through the restrictive immigration legislation of 1924.[15][16]

Shri Yogendra was a new type of Asian teacher. Neither an ancient chanter of texts nor a renunciate hidden away for years in Himalayan hills, like Vivekananda, he was already partially a Westerner before he ever came to the United States. Growing up in British India, matriculating — before he met his guru — at St. Xavier's College in Bombay, translating the Yogic message into a specific argot, linking his religion-philosophical views to those of Plotinus and Henri Bergson, Shri Yogendra was a blended product of East and West.

— Jeffrey J. Kripal and Glenn Shuck wrote in his book On the Edge of the Future [17]

The yoga researcher Elliott Goldberg described Yogendra's system of asanas as "safer, more comprehensive, and more effective than Müller's system",[18] and commented that Yogendra "helped strip hatha yoga of .. what he called 'mysticism and inertia'", enabling people to think about asanas "unencumbered by traditional ideology".[19]

Research

 
Yogendra with Dr. Surendranath Dasgupta in 1924

In 1921, Yogendra conducted X-Ray studies on Sutra Neti kriyas, a yogic technique to clean the nasal cavity.[20] He conducted research on Prana with Surendranath Dasgupta, an orientalist and philosopher in 1924.[21] In 1930, manuscript 'Yoga Personal Hygiene', authored by Yogendra, is the first book on intricate Yoga processes listing research on the yoga breathing techniques Uddiyana bandha and Pranayama.

Contribution to literature

Shri Yogendra authored his first book named Prabhubhakti (meaning "Devotion to the Lord"), published by Diamond Jubilee Printing Press in Ahmadabad. His second book was Hrudayapushpanjali (meaning "Prayer from the Heart"), a collection of his poetry composed in 1917.[22]

Principal A. B. Yagnik, a Gujarati critic wrote in an article, Poetic Versatility of Shri Yogendra, published in 1979,[22]

We here enter the poet's esthetic world and are delighted with his exquisite reflections. At this stage he might as well have been on the road to Yoga, but not reached there.

— "Poetic Versatility of Shri Yogendra", Journal of The Yoga Institute, November 1979

Shri Yogendra also translated Ravindranath Tagore's Gitanjali from Bengali to Gujarati; it was published in 1918, with Tagore's permission.

He was inspired and influenced by the works of Rabindranath Tagore. The country was full of Indian nationalism, and his 1919 poetry collection Rashtriyagita, speaks of the homeland, the citizens and the struggle for freedom. Other books of his poetry collection includes Pranay Bansi, Sangita Dhvani (2017) and Urmi (2014).[22]

Bibliography

Books on Yoga

Yogendra published many books on yoga, and they have often been reprinted.[23]

  • Memorabilia (1926)
  • Yoga Asanas Simplified (1928)
  • Yoga Physical Education - Volume 1 (1928)
  • Yoga Personal Hygiene Simplified (1931)
  • Hatha-Yoga Simplified (1931)
  • Simple Meditative Postures (1934)
  • Rhythmic Exercises (1936)
  • Way to Live (1936)
  • Breathing Methods (1936)
  • Yoga Personal Hygiene (1940)
  • Yoga: Physical Education (1956)
  • Yoga Essays (1969)
  • Facts about Yoga (1971)
  • Why Yoga (1976)
  • Yoga–Sutras (1978
  • Life Problems (1978)
  • Guide to Yoga Meditation (1983)
  • Yoga in Modern Life

Poetry collections

  • Prabhubhakti
  • Hrdayapushpanjali
  • Pranay Bansi
  • Sangita Dhwani (1917)
  • Rashtriya Gita (1919)
  • Gitanjali of Tagore (1917)
  • Urmi (1924)
  • Kavi Tagore (1926)

Personal life

 
Shri Yogendra Chowk at Santacruz, Mumbai is named after him.

He married Sita Devi in 1927. The couple had two sons, named Jayadeva Yogendra and Vijayadev Yogendra.[24]

Yogendra died on 25 September 1989 at the age of 91 in Mumbai.[25][24]

Legacy

In 1994, The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation renamed the TPS 5 Prabhat Colony as Yogendra Marg (road) after Yogendra.

A Chowk named Shri Yogendra Chowk located in Santacruz, Mumbai, is named after him, was inaugurated by Suresh Prabhu, the Minister of Railways, Govt. of India in April 2017.[26]

His son Vijayadev Yogendra (1930–2005) immigrated to Australia and continued his father's work through the establishment of the Total Health and Education Foundation in Melbourne and The School of Total Education in Warwick, Queensland.[27]

References

  1. ^ Singleton, Mark; Byrne, Jean, eds. (30 June 2008). Yoga in the Modern World: Contemporary Perspectives. Routledge. p. 64. ISBN 9781134055203.
  2. ^ Singleton, Mark; Goldberg, Ellen (2014). Gurus of Modern Yoga. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 60–79. ISBN 978-0199938728.
  3. ^ a b c d Goldberg 2016, pp. 2–74.
  4. ^ "World's oldest yoga centre still going strong". The Times of India. 5 February 2015.
  5. ^ Jhangiani, Diipti (22 November 2013). "Neighbourhood Haven The Yoga Institute". DNA India.
  6. ^ Mishra, Debashree (3 July 2016). "Once Upon A Time: From 1918, this Yoga institute has been teaching generations, creating history". Mumbai: Indian Express.
  7. ^ Sadhaka (2015). A Spiritual Path That Led to Arunachala. p. 11.
  8. ^ Barrett, Jennifer (December 1997). "Householders Yoga". Yoga Journal. Active Interest Media (137): 24.
  9. ^ Rodrigues, Santan (1997). The Householder Yogi Life of Shri Yogendra. p. 3. ISBN 978-8185053059.
  10. ^ Rodrigues, Santan (1997). The Householder Yogi Life of Shri Yogendra. p. 32. ISBN 978-8185053059.
  11. ^ Caycedo, Alfonso (1966). India of yogis. National Publishing House, the University of Michigan. p. 194.
  12. ^ Newcombe, Suzanne (2017). "The Revival of Yoga in Contemporary India" (PDF). Religion. Oxford Research Encyclopedias. 1. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199340378.013.253. ISBN 9780199340378.
  13. ^ Singleton 2010, pp. 116–117.
  14. ^ Quinn, Edward (2014). Critical Companion to George Orwell Critical Companion Encyclopedia of World Religions Series Facts on File library of world literature. Infobase Publishing. p. 515. ISBN 9781438108735.
  15. ^ Melton, J. Gordon; Baumann, Martin (21 September 2010). Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices (2nd ed.). ABC-CLIO. p. 3159. ISBN 9781598842043.
  16. ^ Constance A. Jones; James D. Ryan (2006). Encyclopedia of Hinduism Encyclopedia of World Religions Facts on File library of religion and mythology. Infobase Publishing. p. 263. ISBN 9780816075645.
  17. ^ Kripal, Jeffrey J.; Shuck, Glenn (2005). "The American Mission of Shri Yogendra and Paramhansa Yogananda". On the Edge of the Future: Esalen and the Evolution of American Culture Religion in North America. Indiana University Press: 64, 65, 66. ISBN 0253345561.
  18. ^ Goldberg 2016, p. 40.
  19. ^ Goldberg 2016, p. 43.
  20. ^ Guha, Kunal (7 January 2018). "Relative Value: A Century of Wellness". Mumbai Mirror.
  21. ^ "Full text of "Mircea Eliade And Surendranath Dasgupta Guggenbuehl C"". archive.org. Retrieved 11 May 2018.
  22. ^ a b c Rodrigues, Santan (1997). The Householder Yogi Life of Shri Yogendra. pp. 52, 53, 54, 60. ISBN 978-8185053059.
  23. ^ "inauthor:"Shri Yogendra"". Retrieved 17 May 2018.
  24. ^ a b Raj, Ashok (1 April 2010). The Life and Times of Baba Ramdev. Hay House. ISBN 9789381398098.
  25. ^ "Yoga pioneer, Yogendra, dead". The Times of India. 27 September 1989.
  26. ^ "Centenary logo of The Yoga Institute, Santacruz unveiled on the 88th birthday of living Yogi Dr. Jayadeva Yogendra Shri Yogendra Chowk also commemorated". indianshowbiz.com. 30 April 2017.
  27. ^ "A Story of Vision and Commitment". The School of Total Education. from the original on 11 December 2018. Retrieved 11 December 2018.

Sources

Further reading

  • Rodrigues, Santan (1997). The Householder Yogi – Life Of Shri Yogendra.
  • Singleton, Mark; Goldberg, Ellen (2013). Gurus of Modern Yoga. Oxford University Press. pp. 60–75. ISBN 9780199938711.
  • Yogendra, Vijayadev (1972). Glimpses from the life of Shri Yogendra : Father of Yoga Renaissance. Yoga Education Centre, Melbourne. OCLC 220335795.
  • Yogendra, Vijayadev (1977). Shri Yogendra, The householder Yogi. The Yoga Institute. OCLC 83123746.

External links

  • Official website of The Yoga Institute
  • The First Yoga Class on Do Yoga (by Doug Keller)
  • Yogendra on Yoga Vidya (in German)

shri, yogendra, manibhai, haribhai, desai, 1897, 1989, known, shri, yogendra, indian, yoga, guru, author, poet, researcher, important, figures, modern, revival, hatha, yoga, both, india, united, states, founder, yoga, institute, oldest, organized, yoga, centre. Manibhai Haribhai Desai 1897 1989 known as Shri Yogendra was an Indian yoga guru 2 author poet researcher 3 and was one of the important figures in the modern revival of Hatha Yoga both in India and United States He was the founder of The Yoga Institute the oldest organized yoga centre in the world established in 1918 4 5 He is often referred as the Father of Modern Yoga Renaissance 6 7 He was one of the figures responsible for reviving the practice of asanas and making yoga accessible to people other than renunciates 8 ShriYogendra Gujarati ય ગ ન દ રYogendra in his early years sitting in SiddhasanaPersonalBornManibhai Haribhai Desai 1897 11 18 18 November 1897 1 Surat Gujarat British IndiaDied24 September 1989 1989 09 24 aged 91 ReligionHinduismSpouseSita Devi m 1927 ChildrenJayadeva Yogendra Vijayadev YogendraParentHaribhai Jivanji Desai father Alma materAmalsad English School near Surat St Xavier s College MumbaiKnown forPioneering modern yogaPen nameMastamaniFounder ofThe Yoga Institute 1918 Religious careerGuruParamahamsa MadhavdasjiYogendra innovated modern methods to teach Yoga initiating research in Yoga particularly in the field of the Yoga therapy He authored several books on yoga and started the journal Yoga in 1933 He was also a poet writing under the pen name Mastamani He translated Rabindranath Tagore s Gitanjali into Gujarati 3 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Works 1 3 Research 1 4 Contribution to literature 2 Bibliography 2 1 Books on Yoga 2 2 Poetry collections 3 Personal life 4 Legacy 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External linksBiography EditEarly years Edit Yogendra was born as Manibhai Desai in an Anavil Brahmin family on 18 November 1897 in a village near Surat Gujarat He was affectionately called Mogha priceless one in his childhood 9 His father Haribhai Jivanji Desai was a school teacher His mother died when he was three years old citation needed At the age of eighteen in 1916 after distinguishing himself in the Amalsad English School Yogendra attended St Xavier s College in Bombay He felt homesick and fell into depression and lost his interest in studies At the urging of his roommate On 26 August 1916 Yogendra visited the Dharamshala of Paramahamsa Madhavadasaji at Madhav Baug regardless of his robust suspicion of sannyasis and sadhus However in Paramahamsa ni Prasadi 1917 10 he wrote that his misgivings disappeared as our eyes met and as it turns out Madhavadasaji was equally struck by Yogendra s qualities as a capable disciple 3 Yogendra s guru Paramahamsa Madhavdasji c 1930 After a period of courtship through letters Yogendra left his college and went to Madhavadasaji s Ashram in Malsar near Vadodara in late 1916 He received special attention and it was clear that he was being educated and groomed to be Madhavadasaji s successor Yogendra learned Yoga much of the teaching being on the practical and pragmatic use of Yoga and its application in sickness and suffering His training in the Ashram was centered around yogic natural health cures administered to patients in the ashram s sick ward Yogendra left the Ashram after more than two years 3 Works Edit On 25 November 1918 Yogendra established The Yoga Institute at the residence of Dadabhai Naoroji at Versova Beach in Bombay now Mumbai A year later in 1919 Yogendra left for Europe and the United States with the aim of popularizing Yoga and set up a branch of the institute The Yoga Institute of America at Harriman in New York 11 His system of asanas which helped to create the modern yoga movement was influenced by the physical culture of Europeans such as Max Muller 12 Yogendra began the process of domesticating hatha yoga seeking scientific evidence for yoga s health benefits This helped to undo the negative image of yoga and asana practice 13 The Yoga Institute in Harriman New York in 1920 In US among the people Yogendra met was Benedict Lust one of the founders of naturopathic medicine Benedict Lust saw the value of Hatha Yoga for his work and studied it with him Yogendra stayed there working with a number of Avant garde doctors such as John Harvey Kellogg and Benedict Lust Along with the early experiments on Yoga he finished his first books while in US Light on Hatha Yoga and a volume on Rabindranath Tagore 14 He went back to India less than 5 years later proceeding to go back to the USA however thwarted through the restrictive immigration legislation of 1924 15 16 Shri Yogendra was a new type of Asian teacher Neither an ancient chanter of texts nor a renunciate hidden away for years in Himalayan hills like Vivekananda he was already partially a Westerner before he ever came to the United States Growing up in British India matriculating before he met his guru at St Xavier s College in Bombay translating the Yogic message into a specific argot linking his religion philosophical views to those of Plotinus and Henri Bergson Shri Yogendra was a blended product of East and West Jeffrey J Kripal and Glenn Shuck wrote in his book On the Edge of the Future 17 The yoga researcher Elliott Goldberg described Yogendra s system of asanas as safer more comprehensive and more effective than Muller s system 18 and commented that Yogendra helped strip hatha yoga of what he called mysticism and inertia enabling people to think about asanas unencumbered by traditional ideology 19 Research Edit Yogendra with Dr Surendranath Dasgupta in 1924 In 1921 Yogendra conducted X Ray studies on Sutra Neti kriyas a yogic technique to clean the nasal cavity 20 He conducted research on Prana with Surendranath Dasgupta an orientalist and philosopher in 1924 21 In 1930 manuscript Yoga Personal Hygiene authored by Yogendra is the first book on intricate Yoga processes listing research on the yoga breathing techniques Uddiyana bandha and Pranayama Contribution to literature Edit Shri Yogendra authored his first book named Prabhubhakti meaning Devotion to the Lord published by Diamond Jubilee Printing Press in Ahmadabad His second book was Hrudayapushpanjali meaning Prayer from the Heart a collection of his poetry composed in 1917 22 Principal A B Yagnik a Gujarati critic wrote in an article Poetic Versatility of Shri Yogendra published in 1979 22 We here enter the poet s esthetic world and are delighted with his exquisite reflections At this stage he might as well have been on the road to Yoga but not reached there Poetic Versatility of Shri Yogendra Journal of The Yoga Institute November 1979 Shri Yogendra also translated Ravindranath Tagore s Gitanjali from Bengali to Gujarati it was published in 1918 with Tagore s permission He was inspired and influenced by the works of Rabindranath Tagore The country was full of Indian nationalism and his 1919 poetry collection Rashtriyagita speaks of the homeland the citizens and the struggle for freedom Other books of his poetry collection includes Pranay Bansi Sangita Dhvani 2017 and Urmi 2014 22 Bibliography EditBooks on Yoga Edit Yogendra published many books on yoga and they have often been reprinted 23 Memorabilia 1926 Yoga Asanas Simplified 1928 Yoga Physical Education Volume 1 1928 Yoga Personal Hygiene Simplified 1931 Hatha Yoga Simplified 1931 Simple Meditative Postures 1934 Rhythmic Exercises 1936 Way to Live 1936 Breathing Methods 1936 Yoga Personal Hygiene 1940 Yoga Physical Education 1956 Yoga Essays 1969 Facts about Yoga 1971 Why Yoga 1976 Yoga Sutras 1978 Life Problems 1978 Guide to Yoga Meditation 1983 Yoga in Modern LifePoetry collections Edit Prabhubhakti Hrdayapushpanjali Pranay Bansi Sangita Dhwani 1917 Rashtriya Gita 1919 Gitanjali of Tagore 1917 Urmi 1924 Kavi Tagore 1926 Personal life Edit Shri Yogendra Chowk at Santacruz Mumbai is named after him He married Sita Devi in 1927 The couple had two sons named Jayadeva Yogendra and Vijayadev Yogendra 24 Yogendra died on 25 September 1989 at the age of 91 in Mumbai 25 24 Legacy EditIn 1994 The Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation renamed the TPS 5 Prabhat Colony as Yogendra Marg road after Yogendra A Chowk named Shri Yogendra Chowk located in Santacruz Mumbai is named after him was inaugurated by Suresh Prabhu the Minister of Railways Govt of India in April 2017 26 His son Vijayadev Yogendra 1930 2005 immigrated to Australia and continued his father s work through the establishment of the Total Health and Education Foundation in Melbourne and The School of Total Education in Warwick Queensland 27 References Edit Singleton Mark Byrne Jean eds 30 June 2008 Yoga in the Modern World Contemporary Perspectives Routledge p 64 ISBN 9781134055203 Singleton Mark Goldberg Ellen 2014 Gurus of Modern Yoga Oxford Oxford University Press pp 60 79 ISBN 978 0199938728 a b c d Goldberg 2016 pp 2 74 World s oldest yoga centre still going strong The Times of India 5 February 2015 Jhangiani Diipti 22 November 2013 Neighbourhood Haven The Yoga Institute DNA India Mishra Debashree 3 July 2016 Once Upon A Time From 1918 this Yoga institute has been teaching generations creating history Mumbai Indian Express Sadhaka 2015 A Spiritual Path That Led to Arunachala p 11 Barrett Jennifer December 1997 Householders Yoga Yoga Journal Active Interest Media 137 24 Rodrigues Santan 1997 The Householder Yogi Life of Shri Yogendra p 3 ISBN 978 8185053059 Rodrigues Santan 1997 The Householder Yogi Life of Shri Yogendra p 32 ISBN 978 8185053059 Caycedo Alfonso 1966 India of yogis National Publishing House the University of Michigan p 194 Newcombe Suzanne 2017 The Revival of Yoga in Contemporary India PDF Religion Oxford Research Encyclopedias 1 doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199340378 013 253 ISBN 9780199340378 Singleton 2010 pp 116 117 Quinn Edward 2014 Critical Companion to George Orwell Critical Companion Encyclopedia of World Religions Series Facts on File library of world literature Infobase Publishing p 515 ISBN 9781438108735 Melton J Gordon Baumann Martin 21 September 2010 Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices 2nd ed ABC CLIO p 3159 ISBN 9781598842043 Constance A Jones James D Ryan 2006 Encyclopedia of Hinduism Encyclopedia of World Religions Facts on File library of religion and mythology Infobase Publishing p 263 ISBN 9780816075645 Kripal Jeffrey J Shuck Glenn 2005 The American Mission of Shri Yogendra and Paramhansa Yogananda On the Edge of the Future Esalen and the Evolution of American Culture Religion in North America Indiana University Press 64 65 66 ISBN 0253345561 Goldberg 2016 p 40 Goldberg 2016 p 43 Guha Kunal 7 January 2018 Relative Value A Century of Wellness Mumbai Mirror Full text of Mircea Eliade And Surendranath Dasgupta Guggenbuehl C archive org Retrieved 11 May 2018 a b c Rodrigues Santan 1997 The Householder Yogi Life of Shri Yogendra pp 52 53 54 60 ISBN 978 8185053059 inauthor Shri Yogendra Retrieved 17 May 2018 a b Raj Ashok 1 April 2010 The Life and Times of Baba Ramdev Hay House ISBN 9789381398098 Yoga pioneer Yogendra dead The Times of India 27 September 1989 Centenary logo of The Yoga Institute Santacruz unveiled on the 88th birthday of living Yogi Dr Jayadeva Yogendra Shri Yogendra Chowk also commemorated indianshowbiz com 30 April 2017 A Story of Vision and Commitment The School of Total Education Archived from the original on 11 December 2018 Retrieved 11 December 2018 Sources EditGoldberg Elliott 2016 The Path of Modern Yoga The History of an Embodied Spiritual Practice Simon amp Schuster ISBN 9781620555682 Singleton Mark 2010 Yoga Body the origins of modern posture practice Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539534 1 OCLC 318191988 Further reading EditRodrigues Santan 1997 The Householder Yogi Life Of Shri Yogendra Singleton Mark Goldberg Ellen 2013 Gurus of Modern Yoga Oxford University Press pp 60 75 ISBN 9780199938711 Yogendra Vijayadev 1972 Glimpses from the life of Shri Yogendra Father of Yoga Renaissance Yoga Education Centre Melbourne OCLC 220335795 Yogendra Vijayadev 1977 Shri Yogendra The householder Yogi The Yoga Institute OCLC 83123746 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shri Yogendra Official website of The Yoga Institute The First Yoga Class on Do Yoga by Doug Keller Yogendra on Yoga Vidya in German Portal Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shri Yogendra amp oldid 1136812131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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