Ties with India need to be based on peace, mutual benefit, says Chinese envoy
Chinese Consul Ma Zhanwu also called for greater interactions between China and India on the cultural front.
Kolkata: Chinese Consul Ma Zhanwu on Thursday called for greater interactions between China and India on the cultural front saying that the ties between the two countries existed even thousands of years ago.
He was speaking at a seminar 'China-India Buddhist and Other Exchanges' attended by Chinese and Indian scholars and organised by the Chinese consulate, Kolkata.
"I heard from scholars that the two countries started commercial and other interactions several thousand years back through the Silk Road and Buddhism was introduced to China through this route. Later on, Indian monks travelled to China through this route and Chinese monks like Hiuen Tsang also went to India by the same road 1,400 years back," Zhanwu said.
"You need to have a relationship based on the principles of peace, cooperation, openness, inclusiveness and of course, and mutual benefit,” the envoy said.
The consul said, there should be more effective use of names like Hiuen Tsang and Rabindranath Tagore to promote closer, stronger cultural ties and more people-to-people exchanges in the future.
"Perhaps his (Tagore's) works are more popular in China than India, if not equally popular," Zhanwu said.
He said a complete set of Tagore's works has been published in China on May 7, in 2017, that elicited very good response from the readers. Tagore's short stories and many of his poems were also very popular among Chinese students and part of school curriculum, he said.
Visva Bharati officiating Vice-Chancellor Sabujkali Sen told reporters on the sidelines of the seminar that the Chinese Consulate, Kolkata, was involved in the revamp of China Bhavan, which had been founded by Tagore 80 years back as a centre for Chinese studies.
"The Consulate has last month given Rs 60 lakh to renovate China Bhavan and always supports the student exchange programme between Visva Bharati and Chinese Universities. This is an important part in furthering people-to-people exchanges," Sen said.
A number of well-known Chinese scholars from different Chinese institutions as well as Indian scholars deliberated on the past of Indo-China exchanges, delving into history, and future possibilities.