Dear international beloved community of Iyengar Yoga,
In
 early October 2023, we at Iyengar Yoga Detroit Collective decided to 
take a public position regarding the massive bombardment of Gaza. We 
announced in our newsletter that:
Iyengar Yoga Detroit Collective 
advocates for a permanent ceasefire in Palestine, and the dissolution of
 apartheid and occupation in the region.
We felt clear that our statement aligned with our collective’s mission, featured on our home page:
- We embrace Iyengar Yoga as a practice for healing and collective liberation, by providing high quality, affordable classes that welcome all bodies.
 - We promote self-awareness to create a more just, discerning, and compassionate society.
 - We practice cooperative economics to align our values with the ethics of yoga.
 
Those
 who have practiced yoga primarily or exclusively as āsana and prānāyāma
 may feel confused about why we have chosen to speak out on a topic that
 may ostensibly appear unrelated to yoga. Luckily, as Iyengar Yoga 
practitioners, we have always been students of yoga philosophy and 
embrace aṣtanga yoga (the eight limbs), or as BKS Iyengar preferred, 
aṣtadala, the eight petals. We strive to apply these timeless teachings 
to every aspect of our daily lives, and to understand them more deeply 
through praxis.
IYDC, since inception, has been a socially and 
politically engaged community. We apply the framing of 
microcosm/macrocosm, and believe that our actions on the yoga mat 
extrapolate outward to our actions off the mat. We are also, unusual in 
some Iyengar Yoga circles, a younger community, with the majority of our
 students AND teachers in their 20s and 30s, although our founders are 
in their 50s and 60s. We have always been a vibrant, dynamic, culturally
 relevant community.
We are also geographically located in 
Hamtramck, Michigan, a heavily Arab and South Asian community, rich with
 Yemenis and Bangladeshi. We are blessed with civic organizations, 
families, people in leadership, mosques, temples, groceries, 
restaurants, and more, reflecting our incredibly diverse community. We 
are not far from Dearborn, MI, home to the largest Arab population in 
the USA.  
[UPDATE: We are located in the heart of the Yemeni 
community, and we are in shock and horror at the bombing of Yemen by the
 USA/UK instigated on 11 January. We call for an immediate ceasefire on 
the beleaguered families of our neighbors!] 
Congresswoman
 Rashida Tlaib is a friend and representative for many people in IYDC’s 
immediate and extended community. Many of us have Palestinian friends, 
neighbors, coworkers, and colleagues. These connections to the 
Palestinian and larger Arab diaspora make this particular conflict even 
more relevant to our studio community. Additionally, Hamtramck is a town
 in the midst of Detroit, a metropolis with one of the largest Black populations
 in the USA and an illustrious, globally impacting cultural and 
political landscape.
Hamtramck is also home to many young 
artists, entrepreneurs, digital nomads, and more. The Metro Detroit area is home to a thriving Jewish community and 
many of our Jewish students, along with students of all faiths and 
backgrounds, are calling for a permanent ceasefire. 
We at IYDC recognize that the crisis in Gaza and the occupied West Bank are but current iterations of a longstanding occupation. Some of us have intensified our research and study of Israel/Palestine in order to comprehend the situation more fully. Professor and historian Rashid Khalidi describes how the early Zionist statements were explicit in their settler colonial mission, freely using the language of occupation and colonialism. However, as he describes, after WWII, the practice of settler colonialism was no longer condoned by the international community, at which point the Zionist project began using the language of “self-determination” to define and justify itself. Because Europeans had committed the unspeakable brutality of the Jewish holocaust, many felt a burning urgency to unconditionally support the creation of the State of Israel to absolve themselves of their deplorable actions and inactions.
But
 as every historian and scholar, from Khalidi to Israeli 
Ilan Pappé to Edward Said, point out, the Zionist project required the 
dislocation of the current residents of the region. Millions in the 
Palestinian diaspora have lost their ancestral lands because Israel has 
deprived them of the right of return, just as the First Nations/Native 
Americans were stripped of their land, cultural, and spiritual 
practices, and endured forced family separation and assimilation. Here 
on Turtle Island, indigenous people were and continue to be killed 
through disease, military and civilian violence, and policies of 
displacement, forced marches, and relocation.
Yehudi Menuhin, a 
renowned humanitarian as well as stellar artist, recognized the 
injustice of settler colonialism. His father, Moshe Menuhin, spoke out 
against Zionism from the outset. Moshe was raised in a Zionist 
settlement in Palestine before the establishment of the state of Israel.
 However he chose to live in New York as an adult, when he realized the 
dream of Israel required a nightmare for the Palestinians. Moshe Menuhin
 “left Israel because he saw the Zionists were worshipping not God but their own power.” Other anti-Zionist Jews of his era include Martin Buber, Hannah Arendt, and Albert Einstein.
Yehudi
 Menuhin received backlash for his outspoken humanitarian stance. Is it 
coincidence that one of the first non-Indian students of Iyengar Yoga 
was an anti-Zionist Jew? Clearly both Moshe and Yehudi Menuhin were 
nonconformists, able to depart from dominant narratives, and recognize 
deeper truths about power, violence, spirituality, and identity. Perhaps
 this same search for truth helped lead Yehudi to BKS Iyengar.
Since
 the 1950s, the occupation has drastically expanded, Zionism has become 
more deeply entrenched, millions more have been displaced, and more 
lives lost. The resistance to the occupation has also expanded. As 
nonviolent resistance attempts were met with violent suppression, the 
resistance erupted in violence more frequently. IYDC does not condone 
violence, in keeping with the foundational tenet of yoga, ahimsa. 
However we also view ahimsa, not only as nonviolence of thought, word, 
and deed, but also as disruption of violence when it arises. We 
understand settler colonialism as inherently violent, wherever and 
whenever it occurs. Without condoning violent resistance, we also 
recognize that suppressing nonviolent resistance creates conditions for 
armed resistance to increase.
IYDC occupies unceded land of the 
Three Fires Confederacy of the Ojibwe, Odawa, and Potawatomi nations. 
Over the millenia, this land has been home to many nations. Many of us 
have been occupiers of this land for generations. Some of our ancestors 
were brought here as captives through the trans-Atlantic slave trade. 
Some of our ancestors came here as a result of the Cold War and the 
labor demands of global capitalism. As settlers, Turtle Island has 
become our homeland, and most of us do not have access to any other 
home. However, we can devote ourselves to solidarity with those who are 
of the land, support land-back movements, and challenge and dismantle 
oppression in all forms. We embrace Lilla Watson/Australian Aboriginal 
Movement’s understanding that “If you have come here to help me you are 
wasting your time, but if you have come because your liberation is bound
 up with mine, then let us work together.”
Since October, IYDC 
has offered opportunities to respond to the current atrocities in 
Israel/Palestine, through Grief Circles, participating in the General 
Strike for Palestine, hosting letter writing and phone calling sessions, Teacher 
Education discussion groups, and āsana and prānāyāma workshops (Inner 
Warrior, Resting for Solidarity, Learning/Unlearning). We invite the 
global Iyengar Yoga community to join us in incorporating yoga philosophy more fully 
to apprehend this crisis as responsible practitioners and citizens of 
the world.
Can we recognize the kleśas that require dismantling 
in order to keep learning and evolving? We are all guilty of avidya. 
This is natural and inevitable because there is always so much to learn.
 We all, even the sages, as they say, get trapped by abhiniveśa, fear of
 death, which may prevent right action. Yama and niyama also become 
frameworks to guide right action, as well as the teachings of Bhagavad 
Gita.
No doubt, all our primary texts have been used to justify 
every political position. IYDC strives to understand our scriptures as a
 framework for personal transformation to build collective liberation. 
In this instance, we advocate for collective liberation as an end of 
apartheid and occupation.
We recognize how difficult it is to 
depart from what our parents and grandparents, or the dominant culture, 
have taught us. We recognize the ways trauma informs our experience of 
the world and how we respond to it. We understand yoga as an embodied 
practice of sovereignty and ethics, such that instead of falling victim 
to our circumstances, we strive to create lives that embody our highest 
values, and integrate our ethics with our actions. We hope that as a 
global Iyengar Yoga community, we can be in solidarity, to heal ourselves, and cultivate well-being for all.