Thought this might be of interest to some of you.
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Source:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/01/15/opinion/edkhanna.phpCHINA AND INDIA
Why cooperation matters
By Tarun Khanna
HANGZHOU, China:
There are some telling signs of economic rapprochement between China and India.
During wintry mornings in the Indian city of Gurgaon, home to call
centers, offshore software companies and luxury high-rises near New
Delhi, dozens of busy Chinese 20- and 30-somethings rush off to work in
software companies and manufacturing facilities.
This is extraordinary. There were no Chinese in Gurgaon just a few
years ago. As I grew up in Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore, the only
Chinese I met were those who ran (excellent) restaurants. Indians did
not use polite terms while referring to the few Chinese in their midst,
and Chinese elsewhere reciprocated with disdain. Now Gurgaon's Chinese
are part of the local fabric.
A similar scenario is unfolding in China. Scarcely any Chinese treat
Indians as unusual in Hangzhou, the center for India's software
companies in China. My Indian passport used to provoke a second look by
Chinese immigration officials; now it barely registers.
But this is not the first time that Hangzhou, a couple of hours
drive from Shanghai, has linked China and India. Sixteen hundred years
ago, a monk from India built the Lingyin Si Buddhist temple here. On
the walls of the temple today, I recognized a rock inscription of the
"Om" symbol, an invocation in many Indian prayers.
These examples of religious and technological exchange, separated by
many centuries, illustrate a sometimes forgotten history of
Chinese-Indian cooperation. More than 1,500 years ago, a sizeable
Buddhist translation bureau was set up in Luoyang in western Henan
Province, at the mouth of the Silk Road by the Emperor Yang.
"The mechanics of translation were not easy," says Tansen Sen, a
Sinologist in New York. "Translation often involved up to four people.
One reciting the Sanskrit texts, one translating, one scribe and then
the fourth proofreading. It was very ritualistic, involving big
entourages of monks that were housed in monasteries, and survived on
patronage, both from merchants and monarchs."
As business patronized the translation bureaus needed to bring
Buddhist texts to China, Buddhism lubricated the wheels of commerce.
The Chinese-Indian symbiosis was so successful that the Peking
University philosopher Professor Hu Shih, speaking at Harvard
University's Tercentennary celebrations in 1937, chose as his subject
the "Indianization" of China, calling it as massive a case of cultural
borrowing, by the Chinese from Indians as the Christianization of
Europe.
The Indian prime ministers, P. V. Narasimha Rao and Atal Behari
Vajpayee, searching for economic links to China, started their tours in
1993 and 2003 respectively in Luoyang, where Buddhism first arrived
from India to China. The Chinese prime minister, Wen Jiabao, and
President Hu Jintao, in subsequent visits to India, alluded to
centuries of Buddhist interaction then and to software now. So did the
governor of Henan Province and the chief minister of Andhra Pradesh.
And at the annual conference of India's software industry association
next month in Mumbai, numerous Chinese delegations are signed up to be
present.
The Chinese in India and the Indians in China represent the
beginning of an economic rapprochement that might well offset decades
of animus. Admittedly, there is still ample suspicion. And it is true
that each country will continue to flex its military muscle as it seeks
to protect its borders and indulges in newfound economic confidence -
China's blue water navies, India's nuclear weapons. But the main story
is the growing entrepreneurship in both countries, and the recognition
in both countries that they can help each other develop economically.
Buddhism is, of course, symbolism. But symbols are powerful. It is
part of the common language that will continue to improve
Chinese-Indian relations. Why else would astute politicians tap into
this common vein?
Sino-Indian relations are now based on corporate rather than
religious ties. China's telecom equipment giant Huawei, a thorn in
Cisco's side, taps into hundreds of software engineers in southern
India, and India's Mahindra and Mahindra combines design expertise from
Nasik in western India with efficient manufacturing in a plant in
Nanchang in China, to ship tractors from Phoenix to Houston to
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. India's NIIT runs dozens of software training
programs across the length and breadth of China. In the ultimate irony,
the state-owned oil and gas enterprises of both countries are learning
to cooperate in their search for energy resources around the world,
shifting the focus of historically warring countries to economic
cooperation.
The belief that China and India will hurriedly borrow from the West
as they accumulate power and influence is erroneous. Much of their
borrowing will be from each other, as it was centuries ago.
Appreciating this mutual learning is crucial to understanding how these
resurgent nations will exert their newfound influence.
Tarun Khanna is the Jorge Paulo Lemann Professor at Harvard
Business School and author of "Billions of Entrepreneurs: How China and
India are Reshaping their Futures and Yours."