Sunday 22 May 2016

Modi"s go to to spice up Indian-Iranian cultural ties too

New Delhi, May 22: Centuries-old cultural ties between India and Iran are set to get a lift when Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurates the “Cultural Festival of India in Iran” on Monday in Tehran.


ModiModi, who left on a two-day go to to Iran on Sunday, can even inaugurate a two-day convention titled “India-Iran Two Great Civilisations: Retrospect-Prospects” on Monday as a part of the competition being organised by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR) in collaboration with the Indian embassy in Tehran, Bonyad-e-Sadi, and Farhangistan-e-Zaban-o-Adab-e-Farsi.


The convention would assessment India’s age-old affiliation with Iran, the custom of cultural exchanges encompassing artwork, structure, language, literature and music amongst others and also will discover synergies for a mutually helpful and nearer partnership ahead, the ICCR stated in a press release.


A significant spotlight of the competition’s inauguration would be the launch by Modi of a Persian manuscript referred to as “Kalila va Dimna” which is a translation of tales from the Panchatantra and the Jataka.


“The facsimile version of the Kalila va Dimna is a tribute to the cultural interflow between India and Iran over millennia, attested by the nexus of the Rig Vedic hymns and Gathas of Zarathushtra, coming all the way down to the reign of Akbar who launched Persian because the language of administration in India which continued until the center of the 19th century underneath the East India Firm,” stated ICCR president Lokesh Chandra.


“The Pahlavi adaptation of the Panchatantra was the prime mirror for princes and commoners,” he stated.


ICCR director-general C. Rajasekhar credited Persian with giving “us a brand new language, Urdu” whereas “Persian literature influenced our literary and spiritual actions of the Medieval interval”.


“The Persian type of presentation influenced our stage and drama. Persian phrases and elegance of writing are a part of each fashionable Indian language, from Hindi, Punjabi to Bengali,” he stated.


Rajasekhar, who’s already in Tehran getting ready for the occasion, stated that the affect of Persian tradition permeated India’s meals habits to performing arts and languages to spiritual ideas.


“In flip, Indian literature, poets and authors significantly enriched Persian literature. India has given poets like Amir Khusrau, Faizi, Bedil and Ghalib and ‘Sabak-e-Hindi’ or the ‘Indian model’ in Persian poetry,” he mentioned.


There might be a pattern of over 100 books in Persian that are publications of these uncommon manuscripts.


“Persian is regarded in India, not as a international language, however as a classical Indian language,” the ICCR assertion stated.


Apart from the convention, there will likely be a night of poetry recital and a “jugalbandi” by which India’s Nishat Khan can pay the sitar and an Iranian artiste will play the tar, an Iranian stringed instrument.


There may even be a show of uncommon Persian manuscripts and miniatures.


Photo Courtesy: Timesofoisrael



Modi"s go to to spice up Indian-Iranian cultural ties too

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