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20/06/24 10:40 AM IST

Nalanda New Campus

In News
  • The campus of Nalanda University was formally inaugurated by Prime Minister Narendra Modi  recently.
Reviving’ Nalanda
  • It was then President APJ Abdul Kalam who officially proposed ‘reviving’ Nalanda in 2006.
  • Addressing the Bihar Assembly, he said: “To recapture [Nalanda’s] past glory… it has been proposed to establish a Bodhgaya Nalanda Indo-Asian Institute of Learning in partnership with select Asian countries”.
  • In 2007, the proposal to re-establish Nalanda was endorsed at the East Asia Summit in Mandaue, Philipines.
  • This endorsement was re-iterated in the East Asia Summit of 2009, in Hua Hin, Thailand.
  • In total, 17 countries other than India — Australia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Laos, Mauritius, Myanmar, New Zealand, Portugal, Singapore, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam — have helped set up of the university.
  • Ambassadors of these countries attended Wednesday’s inauguration ceremony.
  • The Bihar Assembly, in 2007, passed the University of Nalanda Bill to facilitate the creation of a new, international university near the site of the ancient learning centre in Rajgir.
  • In 2010, Parliament replaced this Act with the Nalanda University Bill, which deemed the proposed university to be one of “national importance”, and laid down rules regarding how it would be governed.
  • In 2013, the masterplan for the campus, proposed by renowned architect B V Doshi’s Vastu Shilpa Consultants, was chosen after an international competion.
Centre of learning & Research
  • Nalanda University admitted its very first batch of fifteen students in 2014, to the School of Historical Studies, and the School of Ecology and Environmental studies.
  • Classes were held in the Rajgir Convention Centre, with Bihar government-operated Hotel Tathagat acting as temporary hostel premises for the students.
  • The faculty comprised six teachers.
  • Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen, who had been associated with the project since 2007, became the University’s first Chancellor, and then-President Pranab Mukherjee became the first Visitor.
  • Since 2014, four more schools have been established — the School of Buddhist Studies, Philosophy and Comparative Religion, the School of Languages and Literature, the School of Management Studies, and the School of International Relations and Peace Studies.
  • The university currently offers two-year Master’s courses, PhD programmes, and a few diploma and certificate courses.
Features of campus
  • By 2022, 90% of the campus’s construction was completed. At the time, the university boasted 800 students, including 150 international students from 31 countries.
  • At full capacity, the campus can accommodate as many as 7,500 students and teachers.
  • With a built area of only 8%, university officials say that the campus attempts to “match the architectural and geographical setting the ancient Nalanda University would have provided”.
  • In fact, the administrative block specifically recreates the exposed brick architecture, and elevated staircase that is the signature image of the Nalanda ruins.
  •  Natural light streams into classrooms’ smart wideboards and electronic podiums. While air-conditioned, it utilises various methods, such as hollow walls, to provide natural cooling.
  • Water bodies — Kamal Sagar ponds — cover over 100 acres of the campus’s area. Another 100 acres are covered in greenery.
  • The campus boasts a drinking water treatment plant, and a water recycling plant, as well as a yoga centre, a state-of -the-art auditorium, a library, an archival centre, and a fully equipped sports complex. No cars are allowed inside.
Nalanda Mahavira
  • Mahavira in Sanskrit/Pali means ‘great monastery’. Nalanda Mahavira was active from the fifth to thirteenth century CE.
  • The chronicles of seventh century Chinese traveller Hsuan Tsang provide the most detailed description of ancient Nalanda. Hsuan Tsang estimated that at the time of his visit, the monastery housed 10,000 students, 2,000 teachers, and a gargantuan retinue of servants.
  • Multiple scholars, however, have disputed this figure based on archaeological evidence from the ancient university’s ruins.
  • That being said, Nalanda was definitely not an average Buddhist vihara.
Source- Indian Express

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