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New Delhi: Delhi police commissioner BS Bassi on Friday invited the Ladakh-based 'Drukpa Kung Fu nuns' to train the city school girls for self-defence.
The city police chief was speaking at the culmination of a 2,500 km cycle journey over 52 days by 250 Kung Fu nuns of the Ladakh-based Drupka Order from Kathmandu to Delhi, led by the Gyalwang Drupka, the spiritual head of the 1,000-year-old Drukpa Order based in the Himalayas.
"Even though society needs to change, we will also have to strengthen young girls and women so much that they can give befitting reply to those who try to harass them. These nuns are experts in self-defense and judo-karate. So, I request you all to stay in Delhi for one year as our guests and help us in giving self-defense training to the girls of the city," the commissioner said.
The Drukpa Kung Fu nuns from various states, including Himachal Pradesh, Jammu and Kashmir and also from Bhutan participated in the cycle journey to carry the message of women empowerment and environment consciousness.
National Commission for Women Chief Lalitha Kumaramangalam said that the Kung Fu nuns have shown so much of strength and will power that was generally not talked about.
"It reminds of the immense strength that women embody. It also reminds that women play huge role in conservation and environment consciousness and that they can be the biggest influencers in this campaign," she said.
The cycle journey had begun on 18 November last year and passed through Uttar Pradesh and Bihar via Gorakhpur, Gaya, Patna, Rajgir, Varanasi, Allahabad, Kanpur and Agra before culminating in Delhi on Friday.
Highlighting the rationale behind the cycle journey, the Gyalwang Drukpa, founder of 'Live to Love' global humanitarian initiative, said, "The journey points to the independent and collective will power of women and their equivalence with men.
"At the same time, the use of cycle that is environment friendly sends a strong message of conservation and environment friendliness," Drukpa said.
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