Posted by: rid August 4, 2010
Oldest university on earth is reborn after 800 years
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Nalanda, an ancient seat of learning destroyed in 1193, will rise again thanks to a Nobel-winning economist -By Andrew Buncombe, Wednesday, 4 August 2010







The ruins of Nalanda, the 2,000-year-old Buddhist University near Rajgir in the northern part of India
The ruins of Nalanda, the 2,000-year-old Buddhist University near Rajgir in the northern part of India

During the six centuries of its storied
existence, there was nothing else quite like Nalanda University.
Probably the first-ever large educational establishment, the college –
in what is now eastern India – even counted the Buddha among its
visitors and alumni. At its height, it had 10,000 students, 2,000 staff
and strove for both understanding and academic excellence. Today, this
much-celebrated centre of Buddhist learning is in ruins.



After a period during which the influence and
importance of Buddhism in India declined, the university was sacked in
1193 by a Turkic general, apparently incensed that its library may not
have contained a copy of the Koran. The fire is said to have burned and
smouldered for several months.

Now this famed
establishment of philosophy, mathematics, language and even public
health is poised to be revived. A beguiling and ambitious plan to
establish an international university with the same overarching vision
as Nalanda – and located alongside its physical ruins – has been
spearheaded by a team of international experts and leaders, among them
the Nobel-winning economist Amartya Sen. This week, legislation that
will enable the building of the university to proceed is to be placed
before the Indian parliament.


"At its peak it offered an enormous number of
subjects in the Buddhist tradition, in a similar way that Oxford
[offered] in the Christian tradition – Sanskrit, medicine, public health
and economics," Mr Sen said yesterday in Delhi.

"It
was destroyed in a war. It was [at] just the same time that Oxford was
being established. It has a fairly extraordinary history – Cambridge had
not yet been born." He added, with confidence: "Building will start as
soon as the bill passes."

The plan to resurrect
Nalanda – in the state of Bihar – and establish a facility prestigious
enough to attract the best students from across Asia and beyond, was
apparently first voiced in the 1990s. But the idea received more
widespread attention in 2006 when the then Indian president, APJ Abdul
Kalam set about establishing an international "mentoring panel". Members
of the panel, chaired by Mr Sen, include Singapore's foreign minister,
George Yeo, historian Sugata Bose, Lord Desai and Chinese academic Wang
Banwei.

A key challenge for the group is to
raise sufficient funds for the university. It has been estimated that
$500m will be required to build the new facility, with a further $500m
needed to sufficiently improve the surrounding infrastructure. The group
is looking for donations from governments, private individuals and
religious groups. The governments of both Singapore and India have
apparently already given some financial commitments.

Mr
Sen said the new Nalanda project, whose ancestor easily predated both
the University of Al Karaouine in Fez, Morocco – founded in 859 AD and
considered the world's oldest, continually-operating university, and
Cairo's Al Azhar University (975 AD), had already attracted widespread
attention from prestigious institutions. The universities of Oxford,
Harvard, Yale, Paris and Bologna had all been enthusiastic about
possible collaboration.

Some commentators
believe a crucial impact of the establishment of a new international
university in India would be the boost it gave to higher education
across Asia. A recent survey of universities by the US News and World
Report magazine listed just three Asian institutions – University of
Tokyo, University of Hong Kong and Kyoto University – among the world's
top 25.

Writing when plans for Nalanda were
first announced, Jeffery Garten, a professor in international business
and trade at the Yale School of Management, said in the New York Times:
"The new Nalanda should try to recapture the global connectedness of the
old one. All of today's great institutions of higher learning are
straining to become more international... but Asian universities are way
behind." He added: "A new Nalanda could set a benchmark for mixing
nationalities and culture, for injecting energy into global subject.
Nalanda was a Buddhist university but it was remarkably open to many
interpretations of that religion. Today, it could... be an institution
devoted to global religious reconciliation."

As
Mr Garten pointed out, the new university will have much to live up to.
The original, located close to the border with what is now Nepal, was
said to have been an architectural masterpiece, featuring 10 temples, a
nine-storey library where monks copied books by hand, lakes, parks and
student accommodation. Its students came from Korea, Japan, China,
Persia, Tibet and Turkey, as well as from across India. The 7th Century
Chinese pilgrim, Xuanzang, visited Nalanda and wrote detailed accounts
of what he saw, describing how towers, pavilions and temples appeared to
"soar above the mists in the sky [so that monks in their rooms] might
witness the birth of the winds and clouds".

Yet
the project is not without controversy. Mr Sen was yesterday asked about
reports that claimed the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan Buddhist leader who
has lived for more than 50 years in the Indian town of Dharamsala, had
been deliberately omitted from the project to avoid antagonising
potential Chinese investors and officials. He replied: "He is heading a
religion. Being religiously active may not be the same as [being]
appropriate for religious studies."

The Indian
authorities believe the establishment of the college would act as a
global reminder of the nation's history as a centre of learning and
culture. Politician Nand Kishore Singh, who sits on the country's
influential federal planning commission and who is also a member of
Nalanda's steering group, said legislation would be placed before the
parliament this week. He added: "I think there is strong bi-partisan
support."

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