After M K Anand, Vikram Tanna, Nakul Chopra, Vikram Sakhuja, Ashish Bhasin, Ajay Kakkar and Jaipdeep Gandhi lit the ceremonial light and declared the festivities on, Goafest was officially open to its 2000+ attendees looking forward to soaking in the creativity and tapping into the knowledge by the inspiring array of speakers lined up this year. Starting with an address by Mr. Ashish Bhasin, who got a lot of cheering from the crowd when he welcomed the guests to the 50th year of Abbys and 13th year of Goafest, he paved way for two brilliant speakers with awe-inspiring stories, exiting the stage with the promise of leaving “Goa greener than it is.”

THE YOGI BABA WHO TOOK THE WORLD OF MNC BY STORM

It was indeed a big day for intrigue and for Make In India, because the man who came next swathed in a saffron loincloth was the man for whom every single soul in the audience was all ears since the time the Goafest Day 1 schedule was announced. It was none other than the mind behind India’s largest swadeshi FMCG Patanjali, the super baba on the tryst to make yog and ayurveda cool- Yog Rishi Baba Ramdev. After starting classic style with Gayatri mantra, he dived deep, full Hindi, into how everything, from knowledge, emotions, actions, expertise, experience, skills, innovation, research, resource, and even waste, converts to wealth.

Even though he had humble beginnings from an agriculture background, he was never scared to dream of a prosperous country, even for the poor, and the biggest financial powerhouse. “I only had one question: What can I do about this country? From farming to retailing, I haven’t studied anything, but the world is enough to teach me lessons. When you come face to face with reality, it teaches you lessons no conventional course can teach.” Peppered with laughter, yoga, life lessons, jokes and harsh doses of reality, he shared the essence of his being: Jo karo, usko pura karo. 100% daalo apna. Usko beech me mat choro. (Whatever you do, do it whole-heartedly. Give your 100% and don’t leave anything mid-way).

While he encouraged everyone in the audience to take risks, he also, in his smooth style, said, “Whatever you do, do it without ego. Give it all. There is nothing called destiny.” Without any inhibitions, he also added that while some people depended on hard work, some relied on destiny and some believed in cheating. “I believe in universal justice. If you cheat, you might grow for 10 years tops. What will you do after that? Same is the rule for destiny. Work on your work; not on Gods.”

It was all hard work and goodness that has made Patanjali the brand that it is today. As adept at Sanskrit shlokas, and the language of the rishis, as he is in scientific theories, the man was all heart, and not shy of taking on MNCs by its horns ‘till it was all in good spirit, and made the life of Indians better.’ “Patanjali is a non-profit charitable organisation. Our intent isn’t profit. Aasan karwate karwate, bado bado ko sheersasan karwana hai,” he jokingly added with whistles from the crowd.

While he spoke about expanding the brand to other countries, he publicly made a promise that he would never loot from poor countries. “We will never bring money from a poorer country to India. But we will become a global brand. Their profit will be their profits,” he announced with full conviction.

IT’S ALL ABOUT CONNECTIONS WITH EVERY INDIVIDUAL

The Baba must have spoken about controlling the body, mind, thoughts, emotions and actions, and associating oneself with every individual’s mind in his yogic style, but it wasn’t much different from what the corporate honcho Mr. Kashyap believed- It’s all about knowing what your people want.

As Ramdev Baba spread the inclusive, sustainable, decentralized, just philosophy of swadesi, and ended the session with his signature Anulom vilom pranayam procedure, the audience was left laughing, impressed, inspired and entertained by the proceedings of Day 1 of Goafest.  It was obvious that the Baba had made an epic connection with the audience as there seemed to be no end to the session, and happily so for both the speaker and the audience. But Day 1 had to end somewhere.