Moodbidri, Jan 8: Lamenting over the widespread extremism and religious intolerance, Sarod maestro Amjad Ali Khan said that the 21st century was expected to be the century of peace and harmony.
Speaking after receiving the Alva's Virasat Award as the annual cultural event ” 21st in the series ” got off to a start at Vidyagiri near Moodbidri, on Thursday, he said that people should learn to respect all human beings.
œWe are still killing people on account of religion despite acquiring a good amount of education and achieving excellence in science, he lamented.
He was brought to the stage in a procession in which about 15 art troupes, including the Mookambika Chande Baaga of Konchadi, Mangaluru, took part.
The Virasat award carries a cash prize of Rs. 1 lakh, and a memento. The Sarod player was accompanied by his wife Subbalakshmi Khan.
Chairman of Nitte Education Trust N. Vinay Hegde said that the purpose of education was to build personalities and urged the students to excel in one chosen field.
Earlier, Minister in-charge of Dakshina Kannada B. Ramanath Rai, who inaugurated the four-day cultural event in the absence of Dharmadhikari of Shri Kshethra Dharmasthala D. Veerendra Heggade, said that Moodbidri had emerged as a centre where misunderstandings between people had been replaced by communal harmony.
Chairman of Alva's Education Foundation M. Mohan Alva, which organises the event, welcomed the gathering.
Later, people witnessed Desert Storm, a blend of classical and folk cultural show from Rajasthan, and dance programme by 25 students of Sri Rama Nataka Nikethan, Secunderabad.








































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