Chinese, Indians share similarities
By Li Xing (chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2006-11-20 17:38
New Delhi -- Several Indians were very excited on the night flight last
Wednesday from Beijing to New Delhi. They were talking so loud that a Dutch had
to be very rude to silence them.
"We Indians sometimes are too noisy,"
said Dr Arvinder Singh, resident economist at Centre for the Study of Developing
Societies and honourary fellow at the Institute of Chinese Studies in New
Delhi.
And so do the Chinese, so much so that the codes for conduct for
Chinese tourists specially ask them to refrain from talking too loud in
public.
This can arguably be one similar trait between the Indians and
Chinese, but the questions for the similarities and differences between China
and India or between the Chinese or Indians seem obvious but can still throw
people off.
But the questions are asked time and again especially when
top leaders of the two countries meet today to discuss issues of important
concerns and when they are now constantly featured in the international media
for their growths or problems.
"It is hard to avoid a comparison between
the two," Dr Singh said.
"I believe China and India are two countries in
the world that share the most in common," Sun Yuxi, Chinese ambassador to India,
said in a group interview last Friday with Chinese journalists at his residence
here.
China and India are two most populous countries in the world and
both are located in Asia. Both are proud of their own individual long
civilization that goes back some 5,000 years, but both suffered invasions and
colonial rules, Sun said.
Both won true independence in the late 1940s
and both advocated the principles of peaceful co-existence, China's top diplomat
to India said.
Sun also pointed out that the Chinese and Indians share
similar moral ideas.
In fact, the Chinese owe a lot to the Indians, Sun
said. Some of the salient things Chinese, such as the belief that good things
will come to you if you do good things, or the Shaolin kung fu, or even the
Monkey King, can trace their origins to India.
Professor M. D. Nalapat,
director of school of geopolitics at Manipal Academy of Higher Education in
India, has his own way to discuss about the similarities and differences while
responding to the questions in his email to China Daily.
"The chemistry
of the people of the two countries are close to each other, without being
similar to each other," he wrote.
The Indian professor said that "behind
such superficial differences, there is an underlying unity of soul.
"Both
peoples respect family and treasure sincerity. Both share a deep love for their
land and culture. Both are peace-loving, and dislike violence," Prof Nalapat
said. "They respond in the same way to different types of movies, liking those
that have a happy ending and where the truthful and the just prevail over those
who are strong but evil."
As to the differences, both Sun and Nalapat
stress the two countries' dissimilarities in their political and administrative
structures.
Economically they are different, too, although both are
developing countries and have gone through periods of planned
economy.
"India appears to have done far less in terms of exports and
incoming foreign direct invest (FDI), the two variables key to China's success
story," Dr Singh wrote in his thesis, "Comparisons between China and India,"
which was published last year in China & World Economy, an English language
academy journal by the Institute of World Economics and Politics, Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences.
However, "if the Indian economy, despite all
the rhetoric of reforms/liberalization/opening up, has remained remarkably
closed or inward-looking, and is likely to remain so for a long time, and still
revolves around its domestic market capital and enterprises rather than having
been led by exports and FDI or by its external sector, it is not necessarily a
weakness," Dr. Singh observed.
The dissimilarities have become obstacles
in mutual understanding.
"They often do not understand each other, and
do not know how to realize the immense potential for collaboration and harmony
between two civilizations that have survived continuously for more than four
thousand years," Nalapat said.
Chen Wei, who has been studying at Jawahar
Lal Nehru University since June as an exchange student, shared the same
view.
There is still the lack of knowledge about China in India, Chen
said.
The local news media have not been helpful, Chen said, as their
reporting of China is often negative. "The Chinese media are comparatively more
positive," Chen said. Chinese knowledge of India is also limited, Dr Singh
observed.
The library of the India Study Centre at Peking University does
not have extensive collections on India, Singh said. The senior scholars
invariably studied Sanskrit, which is no longer used in contemporary
India.
Meanwhile, very few students study Indian languages. At Peking
University, its Hindu language programme enrolls 10 students every four years,
"because of the market reasons, perhaps," Singh noted, and they end up as
interpreters for multinational or Indian companies or with the foreign affairs
ministry.
Despite all this, "I have always believed that the peoples of
China and India should work together as brothers and sisters," Prof Nalapat
said. "A divided China-India equation makes the whole of Asia weak. A united
India-China equation makes the entire continent strong."
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