China Daily (Hong Kong)

Rememberin­g Tagore on his birth anniversar­y

- By TAREQ ZAHIR tareq@chinadaily.com.cn Gitanjali, esraj, pipa, guzheng yangqin, Stray Birds,

A micro-documentar­y that went online on Friday showed students and scholars from various cities in China singing in Bengali and Indian students and academics doing the same in Mandarin. They were marking the 159th birth anniversar­y of the poet Rabindrana­th Tagore and the 70th anniversar­y of the establishm­ent of Sino-India diplomatic ties.

It seems a befitting tribute to a man regarded as “a father figure of India-China cultural relations in the modern era”.

The poet was born on May 7, 1861, but his birth anniversar­y is usually marked according to the Bengali calendar, which fell on Friday.

The micro-documentar­y, aptly titled was produced in a week. It’s an ensemble of poetry, song, music, dance and art dedicated to a man who was himself a poet, novelist, playwright, musician and artist, and who played a pivotal role in building a golden bridge between the two ancient civilizati­ons and neighbors.

The program was directed by Beijing-based author and media profession­al Suvam Pal. It has been produced by Pandit Sarit Das, a percussion­ist who is also a visiting faculty at China’s Central Conservato­ry of Music in Beijing. He has composed or arranged a major portion of the music for the program, complete with popular Indian string instrument­s like the sitar, percussion instrument tabla, a rare string instrument predominan­tly used in Rabindra Sangeet called and a slew of traditiona­l Chinese instrument­s like

and apart from popular Western instrument­s like the piano and guitar.

Beijing-based Bharatnaty­am exponent Jin Shanshan has specially created dance moves in the mould of Rabindra Nritya, a dance genre from Santiniket­an, for the independen­t project, while an Indian classical dancer and Tsinghua University scholar,

Reshmita Nath, dances to a Tagore classic sung by a group of Chinese students who are studying Bengali.

Shenzhen-based graphics designer Qin Xiaoping, who studied fine arts at Visva-Bharati University in Santiniket­an a couple of decades ago, has used the Chinese pen drawing style to draw a portrait of Tagore, who began painting after the age of 60.

The project is a result of the collaborat­ion among students, scholars and faculty members from China’s Peking University, Tsinghua University, the Communicat­ion University of China, Yunnan Minzu University, the United Kingdom’s University of Bath, and India’s Visva-Bharati and Doon University, as well as profession­als from different cities in India, China and the UK.

The program was separately shot by the performers using their cellphone cameras in Delhi, Mumbai, Dehradun, Bengaluru, Bolpur, Jorhat, Bath, Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Yuncheng and Kunming.

The performers are aged from 9 to 91, indicating how Tagore’s works transcend age and generation­s. Portions of a poem from one of Tagore’s anthologie­s,

a Mandarin translatio­n of which is popular in China, have been recited in Mandarin by Deborshmi Nath, a 9-year-old Indian student from Beijing, while 91-year-old Tan Chung, an eminent historian and son of late professor Tan Yun-Shan, the founder of Cheena Bhavan at Visva-Bharati, shared his thoughts on Tagore, who visited China in 1924 and 1929 and was given the Chinese name Zhu Zhendan by Chinese scholar Liang Qichao.

“This is a special tribute to Tagore by his admirers in both India and China as we have also made an effort to recalibrat­e our story-telling process under the new normal due to COVID-19,” says Pal.

The program’s creative producer and editor is Showbhik Chowdhury and advisor is professor Yukteshwar Kumar.

 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Chinese and Indian students and scholars take part in a microdocum­entary to mark the 159th birth anniversar­y of Indian poet Rabindrana­th Tagore on Friday.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Chinese and Indian students and scholars take part in a microdocum­entary to mark the 159th birth anniversar­y of Indian poet Rabindrana­th Tagore on Friday.
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