- Marseille hit five to close gap on PSG in Ligue 1
- Ranieri's Roma claim derby honours against Lazio
- Late Dembele strike earns PSG French Champions Trophy in Doha
- Hamas official says ready to free 34 Gaza hostages under mooted deal
- Snow, ice snarls post-holiday travel in Europe
- New Orleans attacker had recorded street using Meta glasses: FBI
- Man Utd rally to slow Liverpool charge towards Premier League title
- Amorim seeks stronger mentality to drag Man Utd out of comfort zone
- Austria's conservatives ready for coalition talks with far right
- Blinken wades into South Korea political crisis
- Russia says Ukraine launches 'counterattack' in Kursk region
- Fernandes demands more from Man Utd after draw at Liverpool
- Late Dembele strike wins PSG French Champions Trophy in Doha
- Man Utd hold Liverpool to end losing streak
- Dozens of marine mammals found dead after Russian oil tanker spill
- 'Mufasa' roars to top of N.America box office
- Captain Masood leads Pakistan fightback in second Test
- Albanian Orthodox archbishop in critical condition
- Syria monitor: 101 killed in battles between pro-Turkey, Kurdish forces
- Top US Republican eyes swift passage of Trump priority mega-bill
- Ecuador presidential campaign opens amid drug war, internal power struggle
- Jimenez scores two penalties as Fulham fight back to draw against Ipswich
- Captain Masood leads Pakistan fight back in second Test
- Syrian ministers urge lifting of US sanctions in first visit to Doha
- US rugby star Maher draws record crowd on Bristol debut
- Gaza rescuers say 23 dead in latest Israeli strikes
- The nomadic mini-city behind the Dakar Rally
- Italy's Meloni visits Trump in Florida
- 'Difficult' to be Vinicius: Real Madrid coach Ancelotti
- Ljutic edges Holdener for World Cup slalom victory
- Liverpool-Man Utd Premier League clash to go ahead despite snowfall
- Gauff beats Swiatek to inspire team USA to United Cup triumph
- Comeback king Muller wins Hong Kong Open to end Nishikori fairytale
- Red Cross says determining fate of Syria's missing 'huge challenge'
- Sarkozy: divisive French ex-president beset by legal woes
- India cricket loss to Australia sparks questions back home
- Sabalenka warms up for Australian Open with Brisbane win
- Gauff sweeps past Swiatek to lay down Australian Open marker
- Osaka retires with abdominal injury from Australian Open warm-up
- Cummins lauds 'special' Australia team after India series win
- Naomi Osaka retires injured from Auckland Classic final
- NYC starts driver congestion charging despite opposition
- S. Korea's Yoon ignored cabinet opposition to martial law: prosecutors
- Ravens secure AFC North, Bengals stay alive
- Frustrated Bumrah says India will benefit from Australia defeat
- Crowds, cracking cricket: Five talking points from Australia v India
- Henry, Young power New Zealand to nine-wicket ODI win over Sri Lanka
- Australia win gripping fifth India Test to take series 3-1
- Pistons top Timberwolves despite Edwards's 53 points
- South Koreans protest in snow as Yoon arrest deadline nears
Superstar yogi Sadhguru: 'The age of yoga has come!'
Superstar yoga teacher Sadhguru has more than 10 million followers online and he sees no limit to how many people will become adherents in the coming years.
"I think in 25 years you will have probably 60 to 70 percent of the world doing some form of yoga," he told AFP during a visit to Paris this week.
"Yoga is a science that was first transmitted by the first yogi 15,000 years ago but until now no generation was ready to address their well-being -- and all aspects of who they are -- in a scientific manner using these tools," he added.
Millions discovered 65-year-old Sadhguru, real name Jagadish "Jaggi" Vasudev, during the Covid-19 pandemic, when his daily videos on Instagram became a vital resource to get through lockdowns.
Punctuated by bursts of laughter, they combine lessons on life, yoga practice and humorous reflections.
Yoga is increasingly recognised worldwide for its health benefits, particularly in combatting stress and maintaining physical flexibility.
Dressed as usual in a turban and a huge light-coloured shawl, Sadhguru said yoga's "internal tools" of meditation, postures, breathing and mantras were "within everyone's reach".
"More people are intellectually active than ever before in the history of humanity... This generation and the coming generations are really ready for yoga," he said.
"It's only now we are able to understand ... our relationship to the world around us," he added.
"The age of yoga has come!"
- 'Technology for well-being' -
Sadhguru has many celebrity fans, from Will Smith and Matthew McConaughey to Paris Hilton and Andrea Bocelli, who welcome the way he gears ancient teachings to their materialist world.
He is also close to nationalist Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has made yoga a central part of his image.
But Sadhguru says yoga is not a purely Indian phenomenon.
"People are identifying it with India, with Hinduism, but no, it has nothing to do with that," he said.
He says it was kept alive for thousands of years in India because it was a relatively peaceful corner of the world protected by natural barriers.
"We managed to preserve it ... but a time has come when the world will go towards it, because this is not a philosophy, an ideology.
"This is not a new religion. This is a technology for well-being.
"It doesn't matter whether you're black, white, man or woman. Whatever you are, if you learn to use it, like your camera or your phone, it will work for you."
A keen biker, Sadhguru is also part of several projects around the environmental and biodiversity.
He has a renowned yoga centre and non-profit foundation, Isha, based at Coimbatore in southern India that has planted some 25 million trees, among other projects.
S.F.Warren--AMWN