Gandhian and Indian studies centre in Fudan University

Wednesday 20th May 2015 07:22 EDT
 
Narendra Modi at the launch of the Centre for Gandhian and Indian Studies, at Fudan University
 

Launching the Centre for Gandhian and Indian Studies at Fudan University, Modi said India and China should work together to eliminate poverty.

Pitching for cooperation between India and China, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the two should together touch new heights of progress to eliminate poverty, which will benefit the entire world as one-third of global population lives in the two countries.

Launching the Centre for Gandhian and Indian Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, he said India and China have historical and civilisational ties and they can together create a world that serves the humanity.

“It is said that 21st century belongs to Asia. One-third of the world population belongs to these two countries. So if India and China work together to eliminate poverty, one-third of the global population will be rid of this problem, which will be beneficial for the entire world,” Modi said addressing the students and faculty of the university in Hindi.

“Therefore, India and China should together touch new heights of progress involving sensitivity towards humanity and philosophy of Lord Buddha and experiments of Mahatma Gandhi so that we can give to the world a system, which is dedicated to welfare of humanity,” he said.

Invoking Mahatma Gandhi, Modi said, “The world today is going through two major crises — global warming and terrorism. Solutions to both lie in Gandhi’s teachings. Gandhi is still relevant.”

“Mahatma Gandhi may have been born in a corner of India but he was a global citizen,” Modi said, adding that the apostle of peace could have shown the way out of the crises that the world is going through today.


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