Donna Farhi

Donna Farhi (born 5 June 1959) is a teacher of yoga as exercise and the author of five books on practising and teaching yoga. She has been described as a yoga "superstar".[1]

Life

Farhi has been teaching yoga since 1982. She lives in Christchurch, New Zealand where she keeps horses and practises dressage as well as yoga.[2] She tours the world each year to teach yoga in different countries.[3] As well as yoga, she has been influenced by her friend the psychologist Richard Miller, founder of the Integrative Restoration Institute, and teaches the restorative technique of yoga nidra.[1] She studied the asanas with B. K. S. Iyengar in India, finding the practice formal and leading to constant injuries, and then with Angela Farmer to investigate a freer style of practice.[4]

Farhi has written articles for Yoga International and Yoga Journal.[2][5] She has been described as a yoga "superstar",[1] and has been profiled in at least four publications as an exceptional yoga teacher, including in Janice Gates's 2006 Yogini: The Power of Women in Yoga.[6][7]

Elle magazine recorded that Farhi experienced abuse from a yoga teacher when she was "in her late twenties", leading her to contribute to the Yoga Alliance's guidelines for teacher-pupil relationships.[8]

Gates writes that Farhi is saddened by the "very strong, explicit identification with the body" in modern yoga as exercise, a focus that in Farhi's view is diametrically opposed to yoga's traditional philosophy that the focus should instead be on the force (prana) that animates the body. Her teaching "integrates breathing, movement, and inner inquiry".[9]

Books

  • 1996: The Breathing Book. Holt, ISBN 978-0805042979
  • 2000: Yoga Mind, Body and Spirit. Holt, ISBN 978-0805059700
  • 2005: Bringing Yoga to Life. HarperCollins, ISBN 978-0060750466
  • 2006: Teaching Yoga. Rodmell, ISBN 978-1930485174
  • 2017: Pathways to a Centered Body. Embodied Wisdom, ISBN 978-0473385583 (with Leila Stuart)
gollark: Well, it should have a *bit* of extra weight.
gollark: Since we can cook things, yes.
gollark: Which is not an issue in modern societies, so the tradition is somewhat silly.
gollark: It's a thing. ish.
gollark: I mean, one of the "wisdom of the ages"es of Western societies is to question past traditions and old ideas.

See also

References

  1. "Donna". My Yoga Journey. 2015. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  2. "Donna Farhi". Yoga International. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  3. "Donna Farhi on Teaching + Practicing Yoga". Yoga Healer. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  4. Gates 2006, p. 47.
  5. "Donna Farhi". Yoga Journal. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  6. Gates, Janice (2006). Yogini: The Power of Women in Yoga. Mandala. pp. 45–52. ISBN 978-1932771886.
  7. "Donna Farhi". Yoga Alliance Standards Review Project. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  8. Blyth, Antonia (29 March 2018). "How #MeToo Shook the Yoga World". Elle magazine. Retrieved 25 April 2019.
  9. Gates 2006, p. 45.

Sources

  • Gates, Janice (2006). Yogini: Women Visionaries of the Yoga World. Mandala. ISBN 978-1932771886.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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