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Italy's Mahi Guruji Celebrates Holi in Nagpur with Italian Disciples Learning Mantras

Mahi Guruji celebrates Holi in Nagpur today, March 6, 2026, joined by three Italian disciples — Sivya, Julia and Radha — chanting stotras, mantras and bhajans in Sanskrit, Hindi and Marathi.

Sam Ortega2 min read
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Italy's Mahi Guruji Celebrates Holi in Nagpur with Italian Disciples Learning Mantras
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Mahi Guruji celebrates Holi in Nagpur, Maharashtra today, March 6, 2026, accompanied by three Italian disciples named Sivya, Julia and Radha who are chanting stotras, mantras and bhajans in Sanskrit, Hindi and Marathi and learning local songs as part of a spiritual tour of India. The group’s presence at Holi places a small European contingent inside one of India’s most public festival moments.

Mahi Guruji is identified in Italy as the founder of Italy's Meditation and Yoga Center and is described as the guiding force behind this journey. His Italy ashram has become a hub for seekers from across Europe, where he teaches yoga, meditation, Ayurveda and the deeper meaning of Indian spiritual practices, and for years he has been working to spread Indian wisdom and rituals beyond geographical boundaries.

The three Italians are explicitly noted as disciples of Mahi Guruji and as currently on a spiritual tour of India, immersing themselves in Indian languages, music and rituals. The trio chant in Sanskrit, Hindi and Marathi and are learning songs in local languages to “understand the essence of India’s spiritual ethos,” a detail cited in reporting on their stay in Nagpur. An Instagram fragment from the trip also describes the Italians as learning Indian languages and chanting stotras, mantras and bhajans during their Nagpur visit.

Julia, one of the disciples, provides a multi-sentence account of her training and the festivals she has been introduced to under Mahi Guruji’s instruction. Julia says, “Mahi Guruji teaches me Indian culture, Sanatana Dharma, Ayurveda and Yoga,” and “Today, I am a yoga teacher, spiritual counsellor and Ayurvedic operator. Our guruji also introduces us to Indian festivals – Ganesh Chaturthi, Navdurga, Holi – and every moment here feels like a blessing. I love everything: Indian food, spirituality, Dharma, and even Bollywood songs.”

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

Organizers and local hosts in Nagpur are not named in the supplied material, but the visit is framed as part of a wider phenomenon: the event highlights global interest in Indian spiritual practices amid festive celebrations, and India’s traditions of dharma, spirituality and cultural unity are drawing admirers from across the world. The Nagpur Holi stop, centered on ritual chanting and language immersion, thus serves both as a festival experience and as a practical classroom for Europeans training under an Italy-based guru.

The visit underscores the Italy ashram’s role in transnational spiritual exchange; the Nagpur celebrations and the disciples’ language and music practice are concrete examples of how that exchange plays out on the ground during Indian festivals.

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