Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
India

India-Arab Ties Span Over Two Millennia: Saudi Envoy

Darpan News Desk IANS, 10 Sep, 2016 01:51 PM
  • India-Arab Ties Span Over Two Millennia: Saudi Envoy
usiness and cultural relations between Indian and the Arab civilizations can be traced back to the very beginning of recorded history and had a profound influence on each other which continues till today, Saudi Arabia's Ambassador to India Saud Al-Sati said here.
 
Al-Sati said that through regular interactions between the two civilizations, the ties have developed to such an extent that many Saudi girls have "Hind" as their name and families have surnames of "Al-Hind", meaning "India" in Arabic.
 
He was addressing a distinguished gathering of artistes and celebs at the inauguration of "The Theatre of E. Alkazi" - named after the renowned Pune-born Indian theatre personality with roots in Saudi Arabia - in Mumbai late on Friday.
 
Certain Indian goods like swords and other articles were very popular among the ancient Arabs who also brought Islam to India around 14 centuries ago after its advent in 7th century AD. 
 
The Abbasid Caliphate in mid-8th century AD saw the founding of "Bait-ul-Hikmah" or House of Wisdom where scholars translated ideas and scholarly works from all over the world into Arabic.
 
It translated many Indian works including those of medicine, maths and astronomy and literature, the prominent being the "Panchatantra", a collection of ancient Indian fables in Sanskrit. 
 
Its original Sanskrit text was lost after it was translated to Persian and the Arabs translated it from Persian to Arabic as "Kalila wa Dimnah" and it reached Europe and other parts of the world, Al-Sati said.
 
The great scholar Al Beruni visited India in early 11th century and wrote an encyclopedic book on India, presenting it in an enlightening form to the world, besides translating books from Sanskrit to Arabic and vice-versa. 
 
 
India reciprocated in equal measure. Various Muslim kingdoms introduced Arabic educational systems, attracted top learned men from the Arab world, and annual pilgrimage to Mecca also added to the cultural exchanges.
 
Even today, Arabic is taught in many colleges and universities across India, contributing to the Arab culture and literature, and this is duly acknowledged by the Arab people, Al-Sati said.
 
The ambassador described Ebrahim Alkazi, 91, as "a theatre legend whose contribution to the fields of theatre, fine arts and culture has been extraordinary.
 
"He is acknowledged and credited for innovating the Indian theatre, staging more than 50 plays in his lifetime, producing some of the finest actors and directors of the state and screen in India, besides contributing to preservation of Indian cultural history through his Alkazi Foundation of Arts," Al-Sati said, paying glowing tributes to Alkazi.
 
He revealed that Alkazi's father Hamad was a trader from Unaiza in Saudi Arabia's Qassim region who subsequently settled in Pune where Ebrahim was born in 1925. Displaying interests in literature, arts, culture and dramatics from an early age, Alkazi was educated at the St. Vincents High School in Pune and later St. Xaviers College in Mumbai.
 
He joined the college's Dramatics Society and came in touch with stalwarts like Sultan Padamsee, Derreck Jefferies, Hamid Sayani and Jean Bhownagary. Later they formed the Theatre Group, Mumbai's first serious group performing in English.
 
Over the next few decades Alkazi continued his trailblazing works in India, the US and Europe before becoming the director of the National School of Drama and the Asian Theatre Institute. 
 
Present at Friday's inauguration ceremonies were theatre stalwarts like Vijaya Mehta, Alyque Padamsee, Amal Allana and Feisal Alkazi.

MORE India ARTICLES

Iraq Survivor Harjit Masih Says Islamic State Killed 39 Indian Hostages, Sushma Swaraj Denies

Iraq Survivor Harjit Masih Says Islamic State Killed 39 Indian Hostages, Sushma Swaraj Denies
Harjit Masih, 25, told the media in Mohali town adjoining Chandigarh and claimed that the 39 Indians, mostly from Punjab, were attacked by the ISIS terrorists and killed.

Iraq Survivor Harjit Masih Says Islamic State Killed 39 Indian Hostages, Sushma Swaraj Denies

Petrol, Diesel Price Hiked

Petrol, Diesel Price Hiked
Transport fuel prices were hiked effective Friday midnight by Rs.3.13 per litre for petrol and by Rs.2.71 a litre for diesel, including state levies, state-owned oil marketing companies (OMCs) said on Friday

Petrol, Diesel Price Hiked

'Acche Din' For Modi, Not For People: Rahul

'Acche Din' For Modi, Not For People: Rahul
Targetting Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi on Friday said "acche din" have come for Modi and few businessmen close to him and not for people.

'Acche Din' For Modi, Not For People: Rahul

Robert Vadra Hopes Enquiry Is Not For Political Vendetta

Robert Vadra Hopes Enquiry Is Not For Political Vendetta
Robert Vadra, son-in-law of Congress president Sonia Gandhi, said on Friday that he hoped the enquiry ordered against him over his land deals in Haryana will not be used for political vendetta.

Robert Vadra Hopes Enquiry Is Not For Political Vendetta

In A Landmark Judgment, Indian Supreme Court Prohibits Politicians' Photos On Government Ads

A bench of Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose however permitted the use of photographs of the president, prime minister, Chief Justice of India and departed leaders, including Father of the Nation, in such advertisements.

In A Landmark Judgment, Indian Supreme Court Prohibits Politicians' Photos On Government Ads

With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017

With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017
The minister inaugurated a 1 MW solar energy project set up by Britain-based NRIs Avtar Singh Kang and Raovarinder Singh Kang in their ancestral village Lallian Kalan in Jalandhar district with an investment of Rs.7.25 crore.

With NRI Help, Punjab Targets 1000 MW Solar Energy by 2017