PM Modi Bold Gujarat Visit Unites Progress and Pride

New Delhi [India], October 29: When India celebrates unity, it doesn’t whisper – it roars. The PM Modi two-day Gujarat visit on October 30–31 packs symbolism, steel, and ₹1,140 crore worth of progress around the Statue of Unity.

Day 1: Building the Future in Ekta Nagar

At 5:15 PM on October 30, the Prime Minister will flag off a fleet of electric buses in Ekta Nagar, Kevadia. It’s a clean-energy nod from the man who turned a patch of tribal land into a global landmark. By evening, he’ll be unveiling and launching infrastructure projects worth over ₹1,140 crore – each one designed to make Ekta Nagar smarter, greener, and more connected.

These aren’t just ribbon-cutting ceremonies; they’re part of a bigger play. The government’s focus here is clear: eco-tourism, green mobility, and tribal development.

Among the highlights:

  • Birsa Munda Tribal University in Rajpipla – education, meeting, and empowerment.
  • Hospitality District (Phase-1) at Garudeshwar – fuel for local jobs and tourism.
  • E-Bus Charging Depot and 25 Electric Buses – a move towards zero-emission travel.
  • Walkway from Ekta Dwar to Shreshtha Bharat Bhavan (Phase-2) – because accessibility isn’t a luxury, it’s a design principle.

Also in the mix: smart bus stops, new ghats, a dam replica fountain, and residential quarters for GSEC. Each brick, each beam adds up to one message – Gujarat’s progress doesn’t wait for permission.

The PM will also lay the foundation stone for ambitious future attractions – Museum of Royal Kingdoms of India, Veer Balak Udyan, Rain Forest Project, and even travelators at the Statue of Unity. Tourism meets tech, with a dash of pride.

And because India doesn’t do “small” when it comes to symbolism, the Prime Minister will release a ₹150 commemorative coin and stamp marking Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel’s 150th birth anniversary. The Iron Man of India would’ve approved.

Day 2: Unity on Parade

The morning of October 31 begins with a floral tribute at the Statue of Unity, followed by the Rashtriya Ekta Diwas celebrations – a national ritual of unity that now feels personal. After all, this year marks 150 years since Sardar Patel’s birth, and the parade’s theme – Unity in Diversity – hits home harder than ever.

The parade lineup could rival a Republic Day spectacle. Contingents from BSF, CRPF, CISF, ITBP, and SSB, alongside state police forces, will march in full glory. But this year, one contingent is stealing the spotlight – BSF’s all-Indian breed dog unit, featuring Rampur Hounds and Mudhol Hounds. No imported mascots here; it’s Make in India, on four legs.

Other highlights include Gujarat Police’s horse contingent, Assam Police’s daredevil bikers, and the legendary BSF Camel Band – because if unity had a soundtrack, it would probably involve drums echoing through the Narmada valley.

The ceremony will also honour five Shaurya Chakra awardees from CRPF and sixteen gallantry medal winners from BSF, recognised for extraordinary courage in counterterror and anti-Naxal operations. Heroes in uniform, finally getting the spotlight they deserve.

Ten tableaux will roll through the parade route – representing states and forces from Jammu & Kashmir to Andaman & Nicobar Islands, each painting a story of resilience and cultural depth. Add 900 artists performing classical dances from every corner of the country, and you’ve got a visual manifesto of India’s unity.

The Aarambh Connection: Reimagining Governance

Before wrapping up the Gujarat visit, PM Modi will interact with officer trainees from the 100th Foundation Course at Aarambh 7.0. The theme – Reimagining Governance – isn’t just academic fluff. It’s a challenge: to rethink bureaucracy for a new India.

There are 660 officer trainees from 16 Indian civil services and 3 Bhutanese services in this cohort. They’ll return home having heard directly from the man who turned governance into a masterclass in scale, speed, and storytelling.

Symbolism Meets Scale

In two days, the Prime Minister’s itinerary reads like a thesis on leadership through action. Electric buses? Check. Tribal education? Check. Green tourism, smart mobility, and national unity? Triple check.

And let’s be honest – there’s more at play here than ceremonial optics. Ekta Nagar isn’t just another tourist destination. It’s a case study in how infrastructure, culture, and pride can coexist and thrive.

Sardar Patel dreamt of a unified India. PM Modi’s Gujarat visit doesn’t just celebrate that dream; it upgrades it with renewable power, digital planning, and local inclusion. Call it patriotism with a startup’s hustle.

PNN News

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