Congress leader Rahul Gandhi on Monday told a group of civil society representatives that the party's upcoming 'Bharat Jodo Yatra' is like a "tapasya" for him and that he is ready for the "long battle" to unite the country.
The Congress had announced last week it would launch on September 7 the 'Bharat Jodo Yatra' -- being billed by the party as the longest yatra mounted in this country over the last century.
Interacting with civil society members at the 'Bharat Jodo Yatra Conclave' at the Constitution Club here, Mr Gandhi said the Yatra is like "tapasya" for him, according to sources close to PTI.
"I know uniting India (Bharat Jodo) is going to be a long battle and I am ready for it," Mr Gandhi was quoted as saying.
Stressing that the politics of the country has become "polarised", Mr Gandhi said the idea of undertaking the yatra is to tell that on one side there is the ideology of the Sangh and on the other side is the ideology of uniting everyone.
"We are starting this journey with the belief that the people of India want the politics of uniting, not dividing," he was quoted as saying during the interaction.
Mr Gandhi said it does not matter whether anyone walks with him or not in the Yatra, he "will walk alone".
The 'Bharat Jodo Yatra Conclave' here was attended by over 150 civil society organisations, movements, professionals and Unions with the likes of Aruna Roy, Syeda Hameed, Sharad Behar, P V Rajgopal, Bezwada Wilson, Devanoora Mahadeva, GN Devy and Yogendra Yadav, participating in it.
The conclave engaged in substantive discussions and expressed broad solidarity with the Bharat Jodo Yatra, a statement issued by the civil society representatives said.
The participant organisations welcomed the decision of launching the Yatra and expressed their willingness to engage with the initiative. It was also decided that an appeal will be issued in the coming days for larger engagement of various civil society groups, Jan Andolans and individuals, the statement said.
In the morning, Congress leader Digvijaya Singh presented the details of the 'Bharat Jodo Yatra' to the civil society delegates and invited those speaking up on people's issues to participate in it. Gandhi met the civil society members in the afternoon.
Interacting with reporters after the meeting, Congress general secretary Jairam Ramesh, who was present in both sessions, said Rahul Gandhi spent almost 90 minutes interacting with about 150 civil society organisations drawn from 21-22 states of the country.
He said that during the interaction, held in a question-answer format, Gandhi answered several posers from the civil society representatives.
"He (Gandhi) answered questions from 35-40 people. He had no notes or pad in his hands, and definitely no teleprompter," Mr Ramesh said in an apparent swipe at Prime Minister Narendra Modi who he often claims reads from a teleprompter.
Ramesh said Mr Gandhi talked about how the Yatra is planned and what he expects from that.
"Mr Gandhi identified three main pillars of the Bharat Jodo Yatra -- economic, social and political," he said.
Mr Ramesh said there are grave economic challenges confronting the country on account of inflation, unemployment and concentration of economic wealth and growing regional disparities.
He also pointed to social polarisation based on caste, religion, dress, food and language.
Ramesh alleged there were political challenges on account of the growing use of the Centre's institutions and the complete weakening of the states.
"The yatra is by the Congress, its leaders are participating in it. It is a political yatra in a non-partisan way. We have appealed to other political parties, civil society groups and individuals who are worried, concerned, anguished and pained at the current state of the Indian democracy, society and economy to participate in the Yatra," he said.
"We will launch the logo, tagline and website of this 3,500-km long yatra which will be the longest yatra mounted in this country over the last century or so," he added.
Mr Gandhi will participate in the yatra starting September 7 from Kanyakumari, Mr Ramesh said.
The foot march will cover 12 states and two Union territories. It will be about 3,500 km long and will be completed in about 150 days, Mr Ramesh told reporters last week.
Later in a Facebook post, Mr Gandhi posted pictures of his interaction. "It is time for us to unite and march in solidarity," he said.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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