India has a rich cultural heritage. We are inheritors of several grand treasures in the fields of music, fine arts, dance, drama, theatre and sculpture. Our sages and seers have left behind a tradition of piety, penance, spiritual greatness, conquest of passion, etc. Our scriptures are the storehouses of spiritual wisdom. Our saints aspired to the realisation of the infinite. We have inherited great spiritual values contrasted with which the materialistic progress of the West appears insignificant.
The West has to learn a lot from India, and it has now been realised when people in
the United States and Europe are turning to the Indian way of life. Indian yogis and maharishis,
musicians and spiritual leaders
have all attracted them in a big way.
A significant move to project
India's cultural unity has been the
holding of Festivals of India in
various parts of the world. The
West is fast inclining towards our
spiritual values which include
meditation and contemplation,
charity and love, universal
brotherhood and fear of God, piety
and unselfishness, control of passions and peace of mind.
Our cultural unity is further exemplified by the temples of the South and of Khajuraho, the caves of Ajanta and Ellora, which are shining examples of India's proficiency in sculpture and architecture. Our music has come to enjoy worldwide popularity.
Indian classical music, like the Indian dances, is built on the concept of ragas and talas. Each raga is regarded appropriate to a certain time of the day or the night. There are believed to be about 250 ragas in common use in the North as well as in the South. In the modern