India

Gandhi Jayanti celebration returns to China’s picturesque Chaoyang park after two years Covid-induced hiatus

After a two-year Covid-induced hiatus, Gandhi Jayanti celebrations returned to China’s sprawling Chaoyang Park here as it resonated with the recitation of his famous quotes Chinese school children and his bhajans members of the Indian diaspora.
Gandhi Jayanti is celebrated every year at the picturesque Chaoyang Park in Beijing ever since the statue of Gandhi, sculpted acclaimed sculptor Yuan Xikun, was installed in 2005 on the banks of a lake amid serene surroundings to enable his admirers to pay tributes to the Mahatma.
Yuan besides being an acclaimed sculptor, who sculpted the statues of famous Chinese and world leaders, is also well connected with the ruling Commun Party of China (CPC) and the long-time Curator of the famous Jin Tai Art Museum located in the Chaoyang park.
Yuan carved out the Gandhi statue with a unique posture of the Mahatma sitting with a book in his hand.
The installation of Gandhi’s statue for the first time officially in Beijing was regarded as politically significant as for decades the Mahatma, a contemporary of Mao Zedong who led China’s national liberation movement, has remained an enigma in China as the two leaders professed contrasting political philosophies.
While Mao remained a firm advocate of violent liberation movements with his famous dictum that power flows through the barrel of the gun, Gandhi’s successful non-violent movement against the British, in contrast, caught the attention of the world.
Since the installation of Gandhi’s statue, on every October 2 a set of Chinese school children recite his famous sayings, highlighting non-violence, adherence to truth and the importance of conservation.
The practice was disrupted due to the pandemic for the past two years. This year, over a dozen school children recited Gandhi’s sayings in both Chinese and English, drawing applause at a well-attended gathering at the Jin Tai Art Museum which included Indian Ambassador Pradeep Kumar Rawat and Yuan himself.
Rawat, who played a role in the installation of the statue along with Yuan during his previous diplomatic stint in Beijing in 2005, said though born in India, Mahatma Gandhi’s message resonated with the entire humanity.
“Mahatma Gandhi’s principle of non-violence was all-encompassing – human against human, human against animal and more importantly human against nature,” Rawat said.
Yuan in his address said Gandhi’s sculpture has also “become a symbol of friendship between the people of India and China”.
“Why do I want to create Mahatma Gandhi? Gandhi’s devotion, self-restraint and self- motivation have many refractive intersections with the ancient Chinese thinkers Confucius, Mencius and Lao Zhuang,” Yuan said.
“The excellent cultural heritage he left us is the glory of the whole of mankind. He was a man of nature and used in moderation, which is the sustainable development we advocate now,” he said.
This year’s highlight, however, was the short play “Being Mahatma” which was enacted at the museum, highlighting the handling of some of the most tense situations Gandhiji at the height of the independence movement.
Scripted and directed T S Vivekanand, a diplomat from the Indian Embassy here, ‘Being Mahatma’ is a play which attempts to understand why Gandhi was a great soul.
“It tries to make the case that Gandhi communicated with the masses differently than others,” Vivekanand, a poet in Tamil and English, said.
He recently released an anthology of poems called “CogVerse”.
The cast included Joji Luka, a security officer of the Indian Embassy in Beijing who acted as Gandhi, besides Rajashree Behera, first secretary and Neeru Thakkar wife of Lekhan Thakkar, Counsellor, (Economic and Commerce) of the India mission.

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