"Disabilita' non significa inabilita'. Significa semplicemente adattabilità''

Yogi Bhajan was born in India, in Punjab, to a Sikh family in 1929. In 1968 he brought Kundalini Yoga to Canada and the USA, because he knew that this technology would be the most effective way to heal the body and mind of young people, the flower children, putting them in contact with the divine. In this way they could go "further" instead of going "outside" and without side effects or problems with the law. Their souls wanted to be awakened. From the beginning he made it clear that his work was not intended for students, he had come to train teachers. He often told us: “Don't love me, love my teachings”, and so he managed to touch the hearts of thousands of people. In his first lecture in the United States in January 1969, he affirmed his adamant belief that it is every human being's birthright to be “Healthy, Happy and Sacred.” Yogi Bhajan dedicated himself to growing the Kundalini Yoga community around the world as a true family of people who lived not just with each other, but for each other. At the end of the 70s he came to Italy where we met him and learned from him the humanitarian approach of Yoga, to be shared with purity of soul, at the service of humanity. Yoga means Union, and he always reminded us that in Kundalini Yoga the perfect execution of postures and movements is not essential, but it is the spirit that resides in the practitioner that must be perfectly pure, and connected with his own inner light, and united to All.
Sat Nam
"Disability does not mean incapacity. It means adaptability"