
Ruins of Nalanda University |
Plans afoot for international university at Nalanda
Plans afoot for international university at Nalanda The long-awaited
dream of setting up an international university at Nalanda is about to
come true. The detailed project report (DPR) is ready, land acquisition
is going on and a bill on the university will be tabled shortly in the
Bihar assembly.
The proposed university will be fully residential like the ancient
Nalanda seat of learning. In the first phase it will have seven
different schools with 46 foreign faculty members and over 400 Indian
academics, states the final DPR, which was submitted to Chief Minister
Nitish Kumar in February.
The university will impart courses in science, philosophy and
spiritualism along with other subjects. An internationally known scholar
will be the chancellor of the university. Bihar Human Resources
Development Commissioner M. Jha said the idea of the university was
first mooted in the late 1990s but it was President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam’s
initiative in early 2006 that gave shape to the project.
The excavated remains at Nalanda are protected as a site of national
importance. The university, a 5th century architectural marvel, was home
to over 10,000 students and nearly 2,000 teachers. Nalanda is the
Sanskrit name for ‘giver of knowledge’.
Nalanda University, which existed until 1197 AD, attracted students
and scholars from Korea, Japan, China, Tibet, Indonesia, Persia and
Turkey, besides being a pedestal of higher education in India. Though it
was devoted to Buddhist studies, it also trained students in subjects
like fine arts, medicine, mathematics, astronomy, politics and the art
of war.
The DPR states that in its first phase the university will offer only
post-graduate, research, doctoral and post-doctoral degrees. However,
the DPR is also in favour of offering undergraduate courses in specific
areas. Some 1,137 students from both India and abroad will be enrolled
in the first year.
By the fifth year the number will go up to 4,530. In the second
phase, the enrolment of students will increase to 5,812. The university,
on a sprawling 500-acre campus, will have a 1:10 faculty-student ratio
and 46 international faculty members.
The Bihar government plans to take the advice of Nobel laureate
Amartya Sen for setting up the university. Japan and Singapore have
shown interest in investing about Rs.4.5 billion (about $100 million)
for the varsity. The state cabinet approved the University of Nalanda
Bill last week.
The bill will be introduced in the state assembly shortly. The draft
of the bill stated that the international university would strive to
create a world free of war, terror and violence. Educational Consultants
of India, a consulting company under the union ministry of human
resource development, has prepared the DPR of the International Nalanda
University.
‘The government has received a DPR of the university and will hand it
over to the Overseas Development Agency (ODA) of Japan for developing
it,’ officials told IANS. (Courtesy: The Buddhist Channel)
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