PM seeks European support for Nalanda university

By IANS

Singapore : Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh Wednesday sought European support for a proposed internationally-backed university at Nalanda, the ancient Buddhist site of learning in India.


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Speaking at an exhibition on “The Nalanda Trail” here, the prime minister said the university would focus on becoming a centre for excellence for research and teaching with an emphasis on postgraduate studies.

“It will have departments for philosophy and Buddhist studies, regional history, business and management studies, international relations and peace studies and study of languages,” he said.

“It will be established as an international university through an international treaty.”

Welcoming leaders of the European Union to the exhibition, the prime minister sought support from the grouping “in making the initiative on Nalanda a success”.

The exhibition, which unveils the spread of Buddhism from India to China and Southeast Asia and the role played by Nalanda in Bihar, opened on Nov 2 at the Asian Civilisations Museum. It ends on March 23 next year.

The ancient university at Nalanda drew students from all over the world for more than 700 years from the fifth century onwards. At its peak the campus had dormitories for over 10,000 students and 2,000 teachers, from Turkey and Persia to Indonesia, China and Japan.

By special permission of the Indian government, the exhibition features bone relics from the only known archaeological find that can be linked directly to Lord Buddha.

India has contributed 116 precious art objects from four of its prestigious museums for the exhibition, including rare paintings and bronze and stone sculptures.

These include the Nalanda Copper Plate, depicting royal patronage of the Nalanda University.

Calling the exhibition “extraordinary”, Manmohan Singh said Nalanda was “one of the first great universities in recorded history, and one of the world’s first residential universities”.

Manmohan Singh said he had discussed with leaders of Asean and other countries “our collective efforts to revive the Nalanda University as a centre of cross-cultural understanding and learning. There is much we can learn from each other.”

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