Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s mother Heeraben Modi has been cremated after she died in the early hours of the morning.
She was 99 years old, and had been in hospital in western Gujarat state – where she lived – since Wednesday after her health deteriorated.
“A glorious century rests at the feet of God,”Modi tweeted on Friday morning.
He reached Gujarat in the morning and lit his mother’s funeral pyre.
After the funeral, he attended events that had been scheduled in West Bengal state through video conferencing.
The Indian prime minister often visited his mother to seek her blessings on important occasions and festivals.
Her life and sacrifices had “shaped” his mind, personality and self-confidence, Modi wrote in his blog on 18 June when Heeraben turned 99.
“My Mother is as simple as she is extraordinary. Just like all mothers,” he wrote.
They were last seen together in public on 4 December when Mr Modi visited her house during the assembly election in Gujarat, his home state.
Heeraben lived with Modi’s younger brother and his family.
Several politicians and ministers have expressed sorrow over her death on social media.
Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif sent his condolences to Modi.
India’s defence minister Rajnath Singh tweeted that he was “deeply pained” by the news.
“The death of a mother leaves such a void in one’s life that is impossible to fill,” he wrote.
Opposition leader Rahul Gandhi also sent his condolences to Modi and his family members.
Heeraben was born in Visnagar in Gujarat’s Mehsana district in 1923.
“Her childhood was one of poverty and deprivation,” Modi wrote in his blog.
As a teen, she was married to Damodardas Mulchand Modi and moved to the town of Vadnagar a few kilometres away.
“In Vadnagar, our family used to stay in a tiny house which did not even have a window, let alone a luxury like a toilet or a bathroom,”Modi wrote.
He described his mother as punctual, neat and a hard worker. “While working, she would hum her favourite bhajans and hymns,” he wrote.
Heeraben never attended public programmes, he wrote, adding that she had only accompanied him to two events, the second one was in 2001, when he first took oath as the chief minister of Gujarat.
“Since then, she has never accompanied me to a single public event,” he wrote.
Though he became India’s prime minister in 2014, Heeraben visited him in Delhi only two years later. Modi had tweeted photos of himself showing her around his official residence.
Months later, when Modi’s government controversially banned 500 and 1,000 rupee notes in a bid to crack down on undeclared wealth, Heeraben was photographed visiting a bank, like millions of Indians, to exchange old notes.