"Which is the last 'aasana' in Yoga," asked a bench headed by Chief Justice T S Thakur.
As the lawyer fumbled, the bench said, "it is 'shavasana'. You espouse the cause of Yoga when you do not know this."
The bench asked him to withdraw his plea seeking framing of a 'National Yoga Policy' and making Yoga compulsory for students of Class I-VIII across the country and directed him to intervene as a party in a pending similar case.
But senior advocate M N Krisnamani, representing lawyer and Delhi BJP spokesperson Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay who has filed the PIL, sought issuance of notice on the plea.
Krishnamani said "the fact that I do not practice 'Yoga' should not come in the way of a right cause."
The bench then referred to the prevailing situation in Delhi and adjoining areas and, in lighter vein, said "does any one do yoga in this polluted atmosphere".
It is for the government and academicians to decide what should be included in the school curricula, the bench said.
At the end of the brief hearing, it however allowed Upadhyay to seek intervention in a similar plea pending before a bench headed by Justice M B Lokur, which would hear it on November 29.
Upadhyay, in his plea, had sought a direction to the Ministry of Human Resources Development, NCERT, NCTE and the CBSE to "provide standard textbooks of 'Yoga and Health Education' for students of Class I-VIII keeping in spirit various fundamental rights such as right to life, education and equality.
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