Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

UNESCO Declares Vedic Chanting

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

UNESCO Declares Vedic Chanting an "Intangible Heritage of Humanity" and Sanskrit

Has Regained Popularity in Schools

 

 

*********************************************

http://pib.nic.in/archieve/lreleng/lyr2003/rnov2003/11112003/r1111200311.html

 

 

PARIS, FRANCE, November 12, 2003: The oral tradition of Vedic chanting has been

declared an intangible heritage of humanity by UNESCO. In a meeting of jury

members on November 7, 2003, at Paris, Mr. Koichiro Matsuura, Director-General

of UNESCO, declared the chanting of Vedas in India an outstanding example of

heritage and form of cultural expressions. The proclamation says that in the age

of globalization and modernization when

cultural diversity is under pressure, the preservation of oral tradition of

Vedic chanting, a unique cultural heritage, has great significance.

 

The jury members included Dr. Richard Kurin, Director of the Center for Folklore

and Cultural Heritage of the Smithsonian Institution (United Nations), Mr. Juan

Goytisolo, Writer (Spain), Mr. Yoshikazu Hasegawa (Japan), Ms. Olive W.M. Lewin.

Pianist, ethnomusicologist, Director of the Jamaica Orchestra for Youth

(Jamaica).

 

 

The UNESCO declaration will bring international recognition to the excellence of

the Vedic chanting tradition of India, which has survived for centuries encoding

the wisdom contained in the Vedas through an extraordinary effort of

memorization and through elaborately worked out mnemonic methods. The purity and

fail-safe technique devised for Vedic chanting in the olden days led to access

to one of the ancient literatures

of humanity in its entirety today.

 

 

The Department of Culture, Ministry of Tourism and Culture, took the initiative

to put up the candidature of the Vedic chanting to UNESCO. A presentation was

prepared by Indira Gandhi National Centre for Arts. The Department has also

prepared a five-year action plan to safeguard, protect,

promote and disseminate the oral tradition of Vedas in terms of their uniqueness

and distinctiveness, encourage scholars and practitioners to preserve,

revitalize and promote their own branch of Vedic recitation as the custodians of

their own traditions and direct the efforts primarily to making the tradition

survive in its own context.

--------

 

 

Sanskrit has Regained Popularity at Universities and Schools

*********************************

http://ww1.mid-day.com/news/city/2003/november/67869.htm

 

MUMBAI, INDIA, November 4, 2003: The ancient language of Sanskrit has become

prevalent once again at schools and universities in the country. At Mumbai

University, this article says that the number of students registered for

courses at the University's Sanskrit department has gone up from 175 to 260 in

the last 4 years. Dr. G.P. Mahulikar, head of the University's Sanskrit

department says, "I am amazed to see the kind of response from students.

When I did my MA in 1975, there were around 10 students in the post-graduate

class. Now, the number of students is 30." The number of students studying

Sanskrit as part of a certificate or diploma program has also grown to full

capacity. All age groups seem to want to learn the language as it opens up

doors to study ancient epics and disciplines such as Ayurveda.

 

 

Dr. Kalplata Mahajan, a 56-year-old general practitioner says, "I learnt

Sanskrit in school but could not pursue it as I took up medicine in college."

Rajashri Barve, a Kathak dancer from Malad adds, "Since the language is also

becoming popular in schools, there is a demand for Sanskrit teachers. That is

another reason more students are learning the nguage." For Prasad Akolkar, a

Ayurveda practitioner, the language will help her in understanding ancient

Ayurveda.

 

 

The demand for learning Sanskrit has increased for three reasons; firstly it has

become popular as an optional language in schools and Sanskrit teachers are in

demand, secondly it is now offered as a course on the Civil Services examination

and students usually score well on the test, and thirdly as students attempt to

discover their roots by studying ancient Indian epics,the language of the

literature is Sanskrit.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...