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BK Wings
Rural Wing
To improve the condition
of rural children and youth through leadership programmes,
child development camps, and character development programmes
which emphasise moral values.
To eliminate mistrust, superstition, blind faith and unhealthy
social practices through awareness campaigns, slide shows
and lectures.
To foster healthy lifestyles through educational programmes
in health and hygiene, special medical camps, and exhibitions
and lectures aimed at reducing the incidences of smoking
drinking, tobacco chewing and drug addiction.
To eradicate illiteracy through value-based educational
activities for the young, as well as adult education programmes.
To enable individual spiritual empowerment of the indigenous
masses through courses in Raja Yoga meditation.
In the not-too-distant past, India's rural villages were
settings of simple, healthy living. Farming and cattle-breeding
were even considered ideal professions. When India achieved
independence in 1947, more than 90% of India's total population
lived in rural villages and were primarily dependent on
agriculture for their livelihood. Father of the nation,
Mahatma Gandhi, referred to this vast human resource as
'the soul of the nation'. However as towns and cities
began to attract industries, educational institutions,
engineering advances, and health services, the development
of rural areas fell drastically behind that of urban areas.
A significant percentage of the rural population migrated
to the cities, resulting in urban tenements, poverty and
squalor. While the advances of civilisation did not come
to the countryside, negative side-effects of modern progress,
in the form of inflated desires, selfishness, disease,
addictive habits and violence, found their way into rural
lifestyles. Handicapped by illiteracy and disenfranchised
by the shift of economic resources towards urban development,
India's rural masses have lapsed into a backward state.
Currently about 70% of the populace reside in villages
and, although a number of rural development schemes exist,
they primarily supply basic services such as roads, water,
electricity, transport, etc.
The Rural Development Wing believes that spiritual empowerment
can help the rural populace develop self-respect, co-operation
and positive human values which will automatically motivate
them to transform their habitats into havens of cleanliness,
healthfulness, social harmony and productive human enterprise.
With this aim, the Wing organises exhibitions, video and
film presentations, and peace processions, and conducts
camps, educational programmes and meditation courses at
the village and district levels. Wing members also believe
that rural development means not only educating the farmers
and herdsmen, but also the administrative officials at
the village and district levels (Sarpanak, Gram Sevak,
Patwari, etc.), the officials and Board members of rural
co-operative societies, the personnel of village development
agencies, and others. The Wing arranges special seminars
and conferences for such individuals and groups at the
local level as well as in Mt. Abu.
With the spiritual empowerment of the rural populace,
India's villages will not only become clean and beautiful
once again, they will become Gokul Gaon (ideal villages).
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