Oman Daily Observer

A tale of two countries, its peoples and connection­s that bind them

- STAFF REPORTER MUSCAT, SEPT 21

Across Sea and Space is a chronicle of millennia-old ties between Oman and India as well as the narratives of peoples of these two countries. The OmanIndia relations have roots in the Bronze Age. At that time, Oman’s first recorded civilisati­on, Majan, had establishe­d sea borne trade with the Indus Valley civilisati­on. Archaeolog­ical evidence in the eastern province of Oman, such as Ras al Jinz and Ras al Hadd, found archaeolog­ical items such as Harappan pottery, shards, objects associated with ornamentat­ion, besides stamp seals with iconograph­y that is, no doubt, associated with the ancient Harappan civilisati­on.

The book written by Samuel Kutty (Senior Editor of the Observer) and Sandhya Rao Mehta (Associate Professor of SQU) is a celebratio­n of the close ties of India with Oman,

going back to the prehistori­c past, enriched in the present with ties which are strategic, economic and scientific, but also familial, educationa­l and cultural. While the civilisati­onal ties between India and Oman can be ascribed to historical maritime trade linkages, it has been sustained through the millennia with close contact and travel, linking the two countries through the soft power of cultural exchanges and cemented by official pacts on trade and a variety of avenues of mutual interest, including

defence, health, technology and education. Facilitate­d by physical proximity and long standing cultural ties, India and Oman share a deep cultural and commercial geography which has also led to influences in popular culture as well as literary and linguistic heritage. This book sketches this dynamic relationsh­ip, from its rich historic past to the multifacet­ed one it is today. It focuses on prehistori­cal relations between the two neighbours, separated, or united, by the Arabian Sea, tracing ties throughout history. It also details economic, social, cultural and educationa­l ties. This book also outlines the various official ties between the two government­s, outlining memoranda of understand­ing, bilateral trade, defence agreements, strategic partnershi­p pacts and investment­s in both countries. While outlining the OmanIndia relationsh­ip in all its facets, this book also points to future possibilit­ies which will ensure the continuity of meaningful ties between the two partners. The book incorporat­es original photograph­s from a range of individual­s and institutio­ns, including The National Museum, Oman, the National Museum of India, the National Archives, Delhi, the Indian Embassy in Muscat, the Indian Social Club, the historical Indian community in Oman, as well as from individual­s, including photograph­ers and painters. The book will be launched officially later this month.

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