Key Points

External Affairs Minister Jaishankar extended warm wishes to Mongolia on their Naadam Festival celebrations. He emphasized the flourishing cultural and economic ties between India and Mongolia. The festival, recognized by UNESCO, showcases traditional sports like horse racing and archery. Mongolia considers India a spiritual neighbor, deepening bilateral relations beyond culture into strategic areas.

Key Points: Jaishankar Extends Naadam Festival Greetings to Mongolian FM Battsetseg

  • Jaishankar highlights India-Mongolia Dharma-Development-Democracy ties
  • Naadam Festival features UNESCO-recognized horse racing and archery
  • Mongolia views India as a spiritual neighbor
  • Cultural exchange expands to economic and defense cooperation
2 min read

Jaishankar offers warm wishes to Mongolian FM on Naadam Festival

EAM Jaishankar celebrates Mongolia's Naadam Festival, strengthening India-Mongolia cultural and strategic ties through warm diplomatic exchange.

"May our economic cooperation, cultural and spiritual ties continue to flourish and enrich our strategic partnership. – Dr. S. Jaishankar"

New Delhi, July 11

External Affairs Minister Dr S Jaishankar on Friday offered warm wishes as Mongolia begins the celebrations of the Naadam Festival.

In a post on X, he greeted his Mongolian counterpart and offered wishes to the Government and people of Mongolia.

He expressed optimism in the India-Mongolia relationship spanning across areas such as economic cooperation, cultural and spiritual ties and hoped for them to continue flourishing.

EAM wrote on X, "Warm greetings FM Battsetseg Batmunkh, the Government and people of Mongolia on 'Naadam Festival' celebrations. May our economic cooperation, cultural and spiritual ties continue to flourish and enrich our strategic partnership."

https://x.com/DrSJaishankar/status/1943567148699312545

Naadam is a national festival celebrated every year from July 11 to 13 across Mongolia that focuses on three traditional games: horse racing, wrestling and archery, as noted by UNESCO Intangible Heritage.

UNESCO has recognised it as an intangible cultural heritage.

UNESCO intangible heritage observed that the festival comprises oral traditions, performing arts, national cuisine, craftsmanship, and cultural forms such as long song, Khoomei overtone singing, Bie biyelgee dance and Morin khuur fiddle.

Mongolians follow special rituals and practices during the festival, such as wearing unique costumes and using distinctive tools and sporting items. Festival participants revere the sportsmen, sportswomen, and children who compete, and winners are rewarded titles for their achievements.

"Ritual praise songs and poems are dedicated to the contestants in the events. Everyone is allowed and encouraged to participate in Naadam, thus nurturing community involvement and togetherness. The three types of sports are directly linked with the lifestyles and living conditions of the Mongols and their transmission is traditionally undertaken through home-schooling by family members, although formalized training regimens have recently developed for wrestling and archery. The rituals and customs of Naadam also accentuate respect for nature and the environment", the official website of UNESCO intangible heritage observed.

Countries with vibrant cultural traditions, the pillars of India and Mongolia's relationship is based on #3Ds- Dharma, Development, Democracy--as noted by the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) in a statement.

For most Mongolians, India is a "spiritual neighbour", a declared 'third neighbor', a 'strategic partner' and a center for pilgrimage. Of late, the relationship has expanded beyond the cultural sphere into various facets of cooperation in the economic and defence sectors.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While I appreciate the diplomatic gesture, I wish our government would focus more on domestic cultural festivals too. We have so many rich traditions in India that need preservation and promotion. Just saying...
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Rohit P
Mongolia is such an underrated partner! Their strategic location between Russia and China makes them important for India's Act East policy. Smart move by Jaishankar ji to nurture this relationship. The 3Ds framework (Dharma, Development, Democracy) is brilliant!
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Sarah B
As someone who lived in Mongolia, I can say their culture is truly unique! The horse racing tradition is breathtaking. India should definitely explore tourism exchanges - Mongolians would love our festivals and we'd love theirs. Win-win!
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Karthik V
The defense cooperation angle is interesting. With China being aggressive in the region, having Mongolia as a strategic partner makes sense. Cultural ties first, then security cooperation - classic Indian diplomacy at work!
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Divya L
Mongolia calling India their 'spiritual neighbor' warms my heart ❤️ We should invite their archery teams to our traditional Dhanurvidya competitions. Cultural sports exchanges would be amazing!

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