Close X
Tuesday, January 7, 2025
ADVT 
International

India Revitalising Buddhist Heritage Through Ties With Mongolia: Sushma Swaraj

Darpan News Desk, 25 Apr, 2018 12:25 PM
    Indian External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj on Wednesday said that India is reviving its Buddhist heritage through its ties with Mongolia and that the two countries are more spiritual partners than strategic.
     
     
    "Buddhism has been a great connector of civilisations since millennia," Sushma Swaraj said while addressing the birth centenary celebrations of Kushok Bakula Rinpoche, a highly revered Buddhist leader and monk from Ladakh and a former Ambassador of India to Mongolia. 
     
     
    Bakula Rinpoche, as the longest serving Indian Ambassador to Mongolia, made seminal contribution to promotion of India-Mongolia ties. 
     
     
    "Even though Buddhism originated in India, it spread across the mighty Himalayas to East Asia and across the seas in southeast Asia," Sushma Swaraj said. 
     
     
    "Eventually, it also made its way to the vast steppes of Mongolia where it has found a permanent abode for over two millennia." 
     
     
    Stating that her country is once again reviving the Buddhist connections to bring together all those who have adopted faith in Buddha's philosophy and teachings, the Indian External Affairs Minister said that one of the efforts in this direction has been to link the Buddhist pilgrimage sites in India for fellow pilgrims from the neighbourhood and beyond, including from Mongolia. 
     
     
    She said that to revitalise this intellectual connection underpinned by shared Buddhist traditions, India has revived the age-old Nalanda University 
     
     
    "In our engagement with Mongolia, we are also revitalising Buddhism as a strong symbol of our civilisational connection transcending into modern times," she said. 
     
     
    "In our own small way, we are trying to work with our Mongolian friends to protect and preserve our Buddhist heritage." 
     
     
    Stating that India has also offered to provide a statue of Lord Buddha to the Gandan Monastery in Mongolia as a token of the deep friendship between the two countries, Sushma Swaraj said India is also keen to invite Buddhist scholars and students "to visit India to discover our precious heritage". 
     
     
    She said that Mongolian scholars and students can not only visit the Buddhist pilgrimage sites in India but also undertake higher studies in some of the prominent institutions engaged in study of Buddhist philosophy. 
     
     
    She also said that this will help in forging strong people-to-people contacts and allow better understanding about each other's country, culture and customs.
     
     
    Stating that India and Mongolia share a unique partnership, Sushma Swaraj said: "We are strategic partners, but more than that we are spiritual partners. This spiritual connection through Buddhism provides strength to our relationship. It is not a partnership of convenience but a relationship of trust and spiritual strength. Such partnerships, built on the strong foundation of friendship and mutual trust, are everlasting."
     
     
    She said that in these times of rising violence and extremism spread in the name of faith, there is increasing need to follow the Buddhist path of peace and tolerance.
     
     
    "Many regions of the world today, including our own region, is witnessing a trend of radicalism," she said. 
     
     
    "Such radicalism provides a fertile ground for terrorism to flourish. It then spreads to the neighbouring areas and engulfs the entire region," she stated. 
     
     
    "In such difficult times, there is a need for a philosophy that teaches peace and tolerance. Countries like India and Mongolia with our strong Buddhist traditions have a crucial role to counter this trend of radicalism."
     
     
    Earlier in the day, Sushma Swaraj and her Mongolian counterpart Damdin Tsogtbaatar co-chaired the sixth round of the India-Mongolia Joint Consultative Committee (IMJCC), focusing on a range of issues including economic, energy, political, strategic, educational and cultural ties.
     
     
    Following the meeting, the visiting Indian minister called on Mongolian Prime Minister U. Khurelsukh here and discussed cooperation in developmental cooperation, mining, capacity building, IT, films and other areas of bilateral cooperation.
     
     
    She also held meetings with Gombojav Zandanshata, Mongolian Minister and Chief of Cabinet Secretariat, and M. Enkhbold, Speaker of the Mongolian Parliament, the State Great Khural. 
     
     
    Sushma Swaraj arrived here from China on Tuesday in what is the first visit by an Indian External Affairs Minister to this landlocked Asian country in 42 years.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Pakistani Court Retrains Govt From Arresting Hafiz Saeed

    A Pakistani court on Wednesday ordered both the federal and the Punjab governments not to arrest or place under house arrest JuD chief Hafiz Saeed, the 2008 Mumbai terror attack mastermind, until further orders.

    Pakistani Court Retrains Govt From Arresting Hafiz Saeed

    'FreeKarachi' Campaign Ads Appear On Leading US Newspaper

    'FreeKarachi' Campaign Ads Appear On Leading US Newspaper
    The 'Free Karachi' campaign has launched a new drive to raise global awareness over the plight of ethnic Mohajirs in Pakistan.

    'FreeKarachi' Campaign Ads Appear On Leading US Newspaper

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan
    Two Pakistani nationals were arrested on charges of supplying suicide vests allegedly to the insurgents in Afghanistan's Nangarhar province on Tuesday.

    2 Pakistani Nationals Held For Supplying Suicide Vests In Afghanistan

    Community Upset After Former B.C. Mayor Charged With Numerous Sex Offences

    An Indigenous leader in central British Columbia says his community is angry and disheartened after its former mayor was charged with sex-related offences.

    Community Upset After Former B.C. Mayor Charged With Numerous Sex Offences

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol
    An explosion in a Polish shop in Leicester that killed five people, including members of an Indian-origin family, was caused by petrol which was spread throughout the premises, a UK court was told on Monday.

    Blast In UK Shop That Killed Indian-Origin Family Caused By Petrol

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty
    A US Navy veteran charged with killing an Indian techie and injuring two others in a racially motivated hate crime at a bar in Kansas City last year could enter into a plea deal, media reports have said.

    US Navy Veteran, Accused Of Killing Indian Techie, Could Plead Guilty