Mark Zuckerberg kickstarts India tour, visits 'stunning' Taj Mahal

Within couple of hours, the Taj Mahal post had received over 450,000 likes and 11,000 comments

Update: 2015-10-27 19:35 GMT
Mark Zuckerberg in Taj Mahal (Photo Credits: Facebook/Mark Zuckerberg)

New Delhi: Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg on Tuesday began his trip to India with a visit to the Taj Mahal in Agra and described it as "even more stunning" than he had expected.

Zuckerberg, who arrived in India to deepen links with a country that is home to the largest number of Facebook users outside the US, said he had "always wanted to see" the TajMahal.

"I'm in India for our Town hall Question and Answer on Wednesday, and I decided to visit the Taj Mahal. I've always wanted to see this," he said in his Facebook post.

He described the country's most-photographed and photogenic monument as "even more stunning than I expected. It’s incredible what people can build—and what love can motivate us to build.

“He also posted picture of him sitting in front of the Taj Mahal that was built by Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan in the1600s. Within couple of hours, his Taj Mahal post had received over 450,000 likes, 11,000 comments and 7,700 shares. 

Mark Zuckerberg visited the Taj Mahal on Tuesday along with seven colleagues (Photo Credits: ANI) 

Zuckerberg will host a town hall Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi where around 900 students are expected to attend the Q&A session. India is home to over 130 million users, making it the second largest user base for the world's largest social networking site after the US.

Before coming to India, he yesterday delivered a 20-minute speech in Mandarin at Tsinghua University in China. The young billionaire, who is married to Chinese-American Priscilla Chan, had set himself the goal of learning Mandarin in 2010.

After his speech, he shared his accomplishment with his followers on Facebook along with a video of the speech with English subtitles.

“I just gave my first ever speech in Chinese at Tsinghua University in Beijing—on why you need a strong sense of mission to change the world. “This was also my first real speech in any language sharing how I started thinking about Facebook's mission, what has kept me going through challenging times and what our mission means now looking ahead for our community of 1.5billion people," he wrote.

Zuckerberg had joined the board of Tsinghua's School of Economics and Management last year. He had last month conversed with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Mandarin at a meeting with technology chiefs in the US.

Facebook is banned in Mainland China and remains untapped for Facebook that has over 1.3 billion users globally. 

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