"If you are a yogi then you are in UP" Slogan echoed in Singapore: Indian community filled with enthusiasm after finding Chief Minister Yogi among them
Lucknow/Singapore. There was tremendous enthusiasm among the NRI community after seeing Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath among them in Singapore. This information was given in an official statement. According to the statement, during the Chief Minister’s address, there was continuous applause at the venue and the echo of “Yogi hai to UP hai” was filling the entire atmosphere with energy.
In the program, when a woman addressed Yogi as ‘Bhaiya’ on behalf of all the women of the state, the whole atmosphere became emotional. A girl had brought a sketch of the Chief Minister to the event, on which Yogi gave his autograph and brought a smile on her face.

The statement said that during the program, Swati of Indian origin living in Singapore expressed her feelings and described herself as the sister of Uttar Pradesh and Yogi Adityanath. She said that she was inspired after hearing the Chief Minister’s address in Sanskrit.
Swati said, “When a saint comes into politics, politics becomes worship, it has become so. On behalf of 11.5 crore women of Uttar Pradesh, I call the Chief Minister ‘brother’, because women have got an environment of security in Uttar Pradesh. Now women can go out fearlessly even at night. There is fear of the law among criminals.”
According to the statement, a woman also tied Raksha Sutra on the Chief Minister’s wrist. On this occasion, the students of Global Indian International School, Singapore presented a beautiful dance performance on Ganpati Vandana in front of the Chief Minister, enlivening the Indian tradition, which was appreciated by the Chief Minister loudly. The founder of this school said, “In you we see the reflection of our revered first Prime Minister and founder of Singapore, Mr Lee Kuan Yew.”
Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said that these children presented the classical genre of India in a very beautiful manner through Ganpati Vandana. Today, when there is a race to adopt western culture, the Indian community living in Singapore, thousands of kilometers away from India, is keeping its spiritual and cultural values alive and taking them forward strongly.
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