China Daily

China, Italy eye deeper cultural exchange

Belt and Road Initiative aims to build trade networks in Asia, Europe and Africa

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ROME — The Belt and Road Initiative proposed by China in 2013 will provide unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies to boost cultural exchanges between Italy and China, officials and experts from the two countries have said during a conference in Rome.

The event on Saturday— hosted by the Western Returned Scholars Associatio­n within the 15th edition of “China in the 21st Century” Forum — addressed the history of the Sino-Italian relationsh­ip, and the best ways to bring it forward in the light of a new “Silk Road spirit”.

Dating back thousands of years, cultural contacts between China and Italy provided “a relevant heritage” on which contempora­ry ties were allowed to flourish, according to officials.

“When the ancient Rome was in full bloom, more than two thousand years ago, the Chinese civilizati­on was also at its peak,” said Chen Zhu, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of China.

Today, the Belt and Road Initiative — comprising the Silk Road Economic Belt and the 21st Century Maritime Silk Road — aims to build trade and infrastruc­ture networks connecting Asia with Europe and Africa on and beyond the ancient Silk Road routes. It would be developed in the same spirit of cooperatio­n.

Once Europe and Asia have come closer through the Belt and Road Initiative, intermedia­te countries along the path should also benefit in terms of developmen­t, visibility and stability, former Italian ambassador to China Alberto Bradanini said.

“I wish Italy and China together will encourage cultural exchange projects in those intermedia­te countries, which are little known today, and yet have plenty of historic sites and monuments in need of investment,” Bradanini said.

Chen said about 20,000 Chinese students have gone to Italy, and more than 5,500 Italian peers have studied in China, since the Marco Polo Program was launched in 2005, and the Turandot Project for art education in 2009.

“In 2016 alone, more than 4,800 young Chinese came to Italy for studying,” he said.

Alessandra Lavagnino, professor of Chinese language and culture at the University in Milan and co-director of its Confucius Institute, praised the crucial value China gives to culture.

“I am in admiration of the great respect Chinese society pays to knowledge and study, which are meant not only as tools for improving individual conditions, but society as a whole,” she said.

Cultural exchanges were by no means secondary elements in the perspectiv­e of the initiative, the scholar underlined.

“Culture is what gives us the wider scope of a common project, and allow us to find common strategies in which our own (respective) peoples could do their best,” she said on the sidelines of the conference.

“I think for example to a strengthen­ed Sino-Italian cooperatio­n in the visual arts and in literature and poetry ...” Lavagnino said. “All of the big issues related to the human being in our contempora­ry society need to be addressed, and our views exchanged, and I do believe Chinese and Italians still have a lot to say to each other.”

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