India in Mexico Newsletter January 2018

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INDIA MEXICO in

A Monthly Newsletter | Vol. II, No. 1 | January 2018

Republic Day Celebrations Lead Stories | 3

Intermoda 2018 Business | 8

Arupa Lahiry’s group Cultural Connect | 10 India in Mexico • January 2018

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In this Issue

LEAD STORIES

69th Republic Day 3 India surging ahead in Mexico 5 BUSINESS INTERMODA 2018 CIMMYT visit WAPCOS delegation in Mexico Information & Communication Technology CULTURAL CONNECT Pravasi Bharatiya Divas Cocina India en Alacena Bistro Basant Panchami Hindi Day Bharatanatyam Dance group Book Fairs Gandhi: Guerrero del alma MEDIA India turns the corner on economic growth (The News) AL, en la mira de India; mercado potencial (Excelsior) India sees good potential for growth in Mexico (Plasticnews) W Radio (Televisa Radio) Arupa Lahiry y el milenarismo del Bharatanatyam en el corazón de la Ciudad de México (Protocolo) Reconocerse como un universo (Revista Siempre) Grupo de Danza Bharatanatyam en México (Prensa Mexicana) Master Strokes (Splurge) FURTHCOMING EVENTS

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Embassy of India

Musset No. 325, Col. Polanco, CDMX, 11550

Tels. 55 31 10 02/1050/4636/6638, 55 45-14 91, 52 03-4803 Fax: 52 54 23 49 Website: www.indembassy.org Email: info.mexico@mea.gov.in To receive an electronic copy of this newsletter, please contact: library.mexico@mea.gov.in Muktesh K. Pardeshi, Ambassador M.R. Qureshi, Director GTICC

Research, Edition and Design: Rebeca Álvarez Téllez, Ricardo Pérez Torres

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69 Republic Day Celebrations th

The Republic Day of India events in Mexico were spread over three days. The celebration began on 25th January with a mesmerizing Bharatanatyam performance by the dance group led by Arurpa Lahiry at Teatro de la Ciudad, which is celebrating 100 years of its foundation.

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The Embassy of India to Mexico City celebrated the 69th Republic Day of India on Friday 26th January. Ambassador Muktesh K. Pardeshi hoisted the National Flag and read out the President of India’s address to the Nation at the Embassy premises. This was followed by Arupa Lahiry’s Bharatanatyam dance group performance; the troupe visited from India to commemorate this occasion. A large number of members of the Indian community, friends, students and well-wishers of India from all walks of life participated in the Flag Hoisting Ceremony. Finally, the reception on 29th January at India House was graced by Minister of Tourism of Mexico City, Vice Foreign Minister, Ambassadors and cross-section of Mexican society. A book on Mahatma Gandhi published by Porrua was also launched on the occasion. The Bharatanatyam troupe in the meanwhile gave performances in Guanajuato, Monterrey and Cancun.

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CIMMYT visit

Ambassador and Embassy Officials visited CIMMYT on 13th January

El CIMMYT trabaja en el mundo en desarrollo con el fin de mejorar los medios de vida de las personas y promover sistemas de maíz y de trigo más productivos y sostenibles. Nuestro portafolio se centra directamente en asuntos críticos, como la inseguridad alimentaria y la desnutrición, el cambio climático y la degradación del medioambiente.

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Intermoda 2018 A large number of Indian textile companies participated in Intermoda 2018 at Expo Guadalajara from 16-19 January. India has been participating at Intermoda for several years now.

WAPCOS delegation in Mexico A 3 member delegation of WAPCOS led by its CMD RK Gupta visited Mexico City from 16 to 17 January. They had several productive meetings with the Government of Mexico and Ambassador of Belize in Mexico. WAPCOS is a consultancy organization and public sector undertaking of the Government of India. It is present in over 42 countries, with 27 in Africa, and are now looking to expand their operations in LAC region. For more information, please visit: www.wapcos.gov.in

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Information & Communication Technology On 31st January, a lecture on “Information and Communication Technology in India” was delivered by Commercial Representative Mr. Ashwani Kumar at the Institute of Engineering, UNAM. This was second in the series of lectures on this particular sectoral development. The first was delivered by Mr. José Luis Herce-Vigil on the topic of Technological Development in India.


Cocina India en Alacena Bistro On 9th January, all Indians and people of Indian origin were invited to celebrate Pravasi Bharatiya Divas in the Embassy. Accordingly, Indian community members met Ambassador and Embassy officials and interacted with them about Government’s programmes, reforms and policy initiatives. On this occasion speeches of Honorable External Affairs Minister, Sushma Swaraj and Honorable Prime Minister, Narendra Modi were screened. Ambassador of India presided over the interaction and explained various schemes of the Government for the benefit of the community and spoke about policies for welfare of Indian Diaspora. The Representative of Indian Association of Mexico briefed community members on the activities of the Association.

Hindi Day 10th January is celebrated as World Hindi Day all over the world. Prime Minister message on this occasion is given here:

Basant Panchami

Basant Panchami, the Festival which marks the beginning of the Spring season in India, was observed in Gurudev Tagore Indian Cultural Centre on 21st January. Students and Teachers of GTICC participated in the Festival and some of them also presented their performance.

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Bharatanatyam Dance Group Bharatanatyam Dance troupe of Ms. Arupa Lahiry performed in Mexico City, Guanajuato, Monterrey and Cancun during Republic Day celebrations.

Mexico City

Embassy’s auditorium 26th January

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Teatro de la Ciudad 25th January


Guanajuato

Teatro Principal 27th January

Monterrey

Auditorio CONVEX 31st January

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Cancun

Auditorio Universidad del Caribe 2nd February

Arupa Lahiry also gave a workshop for the students of GTICC and interacted with them.

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Book Fairs New Delhi World Book Fair and Guadalajara International Book Fair (FIL) have enhanced cooperation in 2018-19. Director General of FIL, Sra. Marisol Schulz participated as a distinguished speaker at CEOspeak, a forum for publishing on 7 January 2018 in New Delhi.

The event saw presentations by Dr Satya Pal Singh, minister of state for HRD; Baldeo Bhai Sharma; Ambika Sharma, director general, international, Ficci; Annemarie Blumenhagen, director of rights, Ullstein Buchverlage, Germany; Antoine Gallimard; Marisol Schulz Manaut, director general, Guadaljara International Book Fair, Mexico; Urvashi Butalia, chair, Ficci publishing committee; Rantesh Jha, co-chair, Ficci publishing committee; Rita Chowdhury, director, NBT; Vikas Gupta, managing director, Wiley India; Monica Malhotra Kandhari, managing director, MBD group; and Karthika VK, Westland.

New Delhi World Book Fair (NDWBF) held for the past 45 years, is now a major calendar event in the publishing world. NDWBF 2018 will be held from 6 to 14 January 2018 at Pragati Maidan, New Delhi. The Fair is organized by National Book Trust, India, an autonomous organization under the Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India, working towards promotion of books and the habit of reading in the country. Today Indian publishing stands poised at a significant crossroad towards the path of growth. NDWBF offers the participants a unique opportunity of doing business with this growing book industry. It is also an ideal venue for promoting titles, co-publication arrangements and trade. Besides the many literary and publishing conferences and programmes to be organized during the Fair, it also opens up a gateway to the publishing and intellectual world of South Asia.

La Feria Internacional del Libro de Guadalajara es la reunión editorial más importante de Iberoamérica y un extraordinario festival cultural. Fundada hace 32 años por la Universidad de Guadalajara, es una feria para profesionales donde el público es bienvenido, lo que la distingue del resto de las principales ferias que se realizan en el mundo. Sin descuidar su vocación como un encuentro de negocios, la FIL fue concebida como un festival cultural en el que la literatura es la columna vertebral, con un programa en el que participan autores de todos los continentes y diferentes lenguas, así como un espacio para la discusión académica de los grandes temas que cruzan nuestra actualidad. Durante los nueve días de la Feria, el público escucha a sus autores preferidos, la industria del libro convierte a Guadalajara en su corazón, y la ciudad se llena de música, arte, cine y teatro del país o región Invitado de Honor India in Mexico • January 2018

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Gandhi: Guerrero del alma Mr. José Miguel Pérez Porrúa of Editorial PORRÚA presented a copy of their new publication on Mahatma Gandhi to Ambassador Muktesh Pardeshi. The book is authored by Gandhian Scholar and former Ambassador of India to Mexico, Mr. P. A. Nazareth. The book was unveiled during India´s National Day Reception held at India House in Mexico City. Ambassador Carlos Icaza, Vice Foreign Minister, Ambassador Alfonso de Maria y Campos, Director-General for Asia-Pacific, Ambassador Muktesh Pardeshi, Mtro. Armando López Cárdenas, Tourism Minister of Mexico City, together with Mr. José Miguel Pérez Porrúa and Mr. Rodrigo Pérez Porrúa, Directors of Editorial Porrúa, were in charge of unveiling the book from during the reception to commemorate Republic Day in India House on 29th January. GANDHI: GUERRERO DEL ALMA is available in Porrúa libraries. For more information, please visit: https://goo.gl/7UBLbT

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India turns the corner on economic growth With a projected growth rate for 2018 of 7.4 percent – after a slowdown in 2017 to 6.75 percent, due, in part, to a drop in exports and a downtick in private investment – India is back on an economic roll. Set to soon regain its status as the fastest-growing major economy, the world’s largest democracy and second-most populous nation is now vying for more foreign investment dollars. And while India still lags behind in infrastructure and rural development, the country is a booming investment destination and is also expanding its capital holdings abroad, including in Mexico. Earlier this week, Indian Ambassador to Mexico Muktesh K. Pardeshi hosted a belated Indian Republic Day reception at his residence, and the main focus of his welcome speech was his country’s burgeoning bilateral relations with Mexico. Noting that the two nations first established diplomatic ties in 1950 – the very same year that India adopted its sovereign constitution and formally became an independent republic – Pardeshi said that binational ties are at an all-time high and positioned to grow even more over the next 12 months. The envoy said that, on the political plane, two-way relations got a significant boost from last July’s meeting between Indian Prime Minster Narendra Modi and Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto in Germany during the G-20 summit, the fourth such meeting in the last three years. “This further elevated the level and frequency of the bilateral political dialogue between our two nations,” Pardeshi said, adding that during this encounter, Modi extended a formal invitation to Peña Nieto to visit India. The ambassador also made reference to the numerous bilateral agreements and memorandums of understanding be-

tween India and Mexico, which run the gamut from cultural, education exchange, extradition, double-taxation avoidance, bilateral investment promotion, legal and air services accords. “Our bilateral relationship is enriched by our close, trusted and expansive commercial association,” he said. “Mexico is currently India’s largest trade partner in Latin America.” According to Indian Embassy statistics, combined bilateral trade topped $6.45 billion in 2016, up from just $1.8 billion on 2006, and accumulated Indian investment in Mexico is now more than $2 billion. There are, at present, more than 150 Indian companies represented in Mexico, primarily in the fields of information technology, pharmaceuticals, automobiles and textiles, providing 30,000 jobs to Mexican workers. “Mexico is also the largest Latin American investor in India,” Pardeshi said. Mexican investors currently have more than $800 million in capital in Indian sectors such as entertainment, multiplex cinemas, auto parts, electric generators and processed food. Pardeshi likewise pointed out that India will be the invited country of honor at the 2018 International Cervantino Cultural Festival in October. India proclaimed its independence from the United Kingdom on August 15, 1947, after the British were unable to contain a pacifistic resistance led by Mahatma Gandhi. Nonetheless, India continued as a dominion state under the British until it adopted a constitution in Nov. 26, 1949, which went into effect on Jan. 26, 1950. Source: https://goo.gl/kyTkT4 India in Mexico • January 2018

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AL, en la mira de India; mercado potencial El país quiere establecer vínculos con las naciones de América Latina y el Caribe, y para ello busca demostrar que sus productos están bien hechos Un país lleno de contrastes. Hablar de India es referirse a varios “mundos” dentro de un mismo país. India es mucho más que el majestuoso Taj Mahal o su muy famosa gastronomía. Y la esencia del país, dicen los lugareños, está en la zona popular de Old Delhi.

India, con más de mil 300 millones de habitantes y una de las economías más grandes del mundo, tiene sus ojos puestos en América Latina. El gobierno del primer ministro, Narendra Modi, se embarcó tras llegar al poder, en 2014, en una serie de reformas que buscan, entre o tras cosas, acrecentar sus vínculos con esta región del planeta.

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Pero hablar de India es referirse a varios “mundos” dentro de un mismo país. India es mucho más que el majestuoso Taj Mahal o su muy famosa gastronomía. Tampoco es referirse solamente a su pobreza o a las desgracias ocurridas, que ocupan espacios en las secciones internacionales, en el segundo país más poblado del mundo, tan sólo detrás de China. Esa nación asiática es un país que crece a pasos agigantados y sirve como referencia para mercados emergentes. El Fondo Monetario Internacional prevé que en este año la expansión del Producto Interno Bruto será de 7.4 por ciento.

En India se hablan 22 idiomas oficiales y hay una gran diversidad de dialectos con los que te enfrentas apenas pisas el país. “Hola, ¿de dónde eres?, ¿quieres comer?”, pregunta, en inglés, Sukhwinder mientras en la calle prepara samosas (una especie de empanada triangular rellena de verduras o papas), todo esto en Colaba Causeway Market, uno de los mercados


más populares de Bombay, que se ubica muy cerca de la Puerta de la India, un monumento en el paseo marítimo en la zona de Apollo Bunder, frente al Mar Arábigo. “Hablo poco inglés, prefiero el hindi”… dice el vendedor, mientras sus amigos nos observan, se ríen y se comunican en otro idioma. “Asamés”, aclara uno de ellos, tras ofrecer de nuevo lo que parece un manjar para varios locales que abarrotan el puesto callejero. Escenas como ésta se pueden encontrar frecuentemente en las calles de India, donde, al menos en Nueva Delhi y Bombay, apenas se puede circular, no importa el día o la hora. Raveesh Kumar, vocero del Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores de India, confirma el interés que tiene su país en afianzar una sociedad con Latinoamérica y el Caribe. “Queremos ser socios de América Latina y el Caribe por mucho tiempo”, asegura. A su lado, el encargado de los países de América Latina y el Caribe del mismo Ministerio, Ashok Das, explica a un grupo de periodistas latinoamericanos los planes de la administración. Se esmera en tratar de demostrar que el “Make in India” está bien hecho y está tratando de llegar a todos los rincones del mundo. “El gobierno se ha dado cuenta de que hay que tener un programa enfocado para cubrir la brecha entre el crecimiento económico y social”, aseveró. El mismo Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores admite que América Latina es un mercado potencial para nuevas inversiones y que la región recibe bien los productos de manufactura india, sin olvidar que esa nación se ha convertido en una potencia en la industria farmacéutica y que su desarrollo en altas tecnologías, así como su industria automotriz, ha captado la atención del mundo. Un reporte publicado en Bloomberg señala que India parece estar próxima a desplazar a China. El informe explica que Pekín y en los llamados Tigres Asiáticos (Corea del Sur, Hong Kong, Singapur y Taiwán) la población tiende a envejecer, mientras que en India su población es joven. La publicación detalla que la cantidad de personas mayores de 65 años en Asia aumentará de los 365 millones actuales a 500 millones en 2027, representando 60% de ese grupo a nivel global para 2030. Por el contrario, India, con una fuerza de trabajo que aumentará de 885 millones de personas a mil millones de personas en los próximos 20 años, tiene la posibilidad de crecer y desarrollarse. Según datos que ha revelado la Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (Cepal), los vínculos económicos entre India y la región aumentaron año tras año debido a que el crecimiento del comercio fue de

140% entre 2009 y 2014. Uno de los puntos que Naciones Unidas destaca es que no se debe perder de vista el reto de reducir la desigualdad, un problema que se puede sentir desde el primer momento que se llega a la capital de ese país y en un perímetro de apenas unos cuantos kilómetros: Hay dos mundos: la nueva y la vieja Delhi. La primera es una imponente zona construida por los ingleses durante la colonia, con amplias avenidas arboladas. Es la zona residencial donde están asentadas la mayoría de las embajadas y los hoteles de lujo, donde por igual te encuentras un automóvil Audi o Mercedes-Benz, que una vaca circulando entre el tráfico de las principales avenidas, o simplemente tirada a medio camino; también te sorprenderás al toparte con algunos monos buscando comida y hasta algún indio molesto montado en su camello, gritando y esperando avanzar en el embotellamiento. En contraste, está la llamada Old Delhi, uno de los verdaderos sabores de India, dicen algunos locales. “Ésta es la puerta de entrada al país, puedes hospedarte en el Taj Mahal Palace o en cualquier otro de la zona de lujo, pero para conocer Delhi tienes que venir a esta zona, donde está la esencia de India, de otra manera es como no conocer nada”, dice muy segura Menna, una estudiante que esperaba su transporte entre cientos de personas. “Tienes que conocer el mercado Chandni Chowk (uno de los más concurridos y antiguos de Delhi), será entonces cuando puedas decir que pisaste la auténtica India”, agregó. El panorama prácticamente no cambia en toda la jornada en Old Delhi, incluida la noche: calles angostas, callejones intransitables, banquetas repletas de indigentes, un tránsito incesante de tuk tuks (moto taxis), motos personales, peatones y bicicletas que no te dejan avanzar. No importa la hora del día o la noche, los regateos a gritos no terminan, el tráfico de mercancía se mantiene, los compradores no paran, los olores penetrantes se intensifican, el calor te agota, la humedad te sofoca, el tendido eléctrico sobre tu cabeza te confunde… la jornada es interminable. Ese laberinto de calles destartaladas lo frecuentan turistas de todo el mundo, que, sin pensarlo, abordan un tuk tuk para hacer una visita exprés a la zona, una parada obligada en Nueva Delhi. Source: https://goo.gl/uzSaEf

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India sees good potential for growth in Mexico Mexico and India are seeing growth in plastics trade between the two countries. Bilateral trade between India and Mexico, including plastics products, grew 31 percent in the first eight months of this year in relation to the same period in 2016, the head of the commercial wing at the Indian Embassy in Mexico said Nov. 7. In an interview with Plastics News at Plastimagen México 2017, Ashwani Kumar said bilateral trade between the two nations totaled $6.3 billion in 2016, with India having a surplus of about $2 billion. Mexico’s exports to India were $2 billion, he said, and India’s to Mexico were $4.28 billion. India’s Ambassador to Mexico, Muktesh K. Pardeshi, said in a separate interview that trade between the two “is likely to top $8 billion this year.” According to India’s Plastics Export Promotion Council (PLEXC ONCIL), based in Mumbai, India’s exports of plastics goods to Mexico grew 32.5 percent a year in the 10 years before this year. “In the last five years, India´s plastics exports to Mexico have grown significantly, going from $51 million in 2012-13 to $97 million in 2016-17,” it said. PLEXCONCIL said that in 2016-17, India’s exports of plastics products to 210-plus countries totaled $7.6 billion, with the main markets being the United States, China, United Arab Emirates, Germany, Italy and the United Kingdom. In August 2017, the country’s plastics exports were valued at $706.34 million, up 14 percent from $619.82 million in the same month a year earlier. “The cumulative value of plastic exports from April 2017 to August 2017 was $3.355 billion as against $3.101 billion during the same period the previous year — a growth of 8.2 percent.”

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Pardeshi and Kumar spoke to Plastics News during a visit to the India pavilion at Plastimagen, occupied by 24 Indian companies. “We see very good potential for the Indian plastics industry in Mexico,” Pardeshi said, while Raju Desai, treasurer of the Plastindia Foundation, which will organize next February’s Plastindia show in Gandhinagar said: “We have good technology at affordable prices.” Pardeshi and Desai said the Indian government will invite a number of Mexican companies to India for Plastindia and will cover all travel and accommodation costs. “Mexico is India’s No. 1 trading partner in Latin America in the plastics industry,” said Desai. PLEXCONCIL participated in Plastimagen México for the fourth time. According to the organization, plastics is among the fastest growing industries in India with 30,000-plus plastics processing units that employ in excess of 4 million people. About 200 machinery companies, with different scales of technology, supply an estimated 3,000 machines a year. Dipesh Patel, international business manager of pigment supplier Advaitya Dye-Chem, one of the 24 companies in the India pavilion, said that Mexico’s plastics industry is “growing very fast.” We started doing business in Mexico 30 months ago, and we already have three or four customers here. Our target is to have 10 or 12 within the next 18 months,” Patel said. The company’s clients are masterbatch and ink suppliers. It does business in 10 countries, including Brazil and Mexico. Source: https://goo.gl/peVUz4


W Radio Ambassador Muktesh Pardeshi spoke to Televisa´s W Radio on India-Mexico Relations. The radio programme was hosted by Ms Mariana Braun, En Fin, W Radio, 27 January 2018 between 11:00 hrs – 12:00 hrs.

Link: http://play.wradio.com.mx/programa/en_fin/

Arupa Lahiry y el milenarismo del Bharatanatyam en el corazón de la Ciudad de México

La presentación especial en el Teatro de la Ciudad Esperanza Iris se llevó a cabo el jueves 25 de enero El Teatro de la Ciudad Esperanza Iris (Donceles 36, colonia Centro Histórico, cerca del metro Allende) abrió sus puertas este año con un espectáculo que fusiona pasado y presente en una propuesta única. Hace dos mil 500 años, aproximadamente, fue creado el Bharatanatyam, uno de los estilos de danza clásica más antiguos de la India, que es considerado como una danza mística, ya que nace dentro de la filosofía y la religión hindú. El 25 de enero, a las 19:00 horas, se llevó a cabo en el recinto de la calle de Donceles una presentación especial de Bharatanatyam de Arupa Lahiry. Danza tradicional de la India de manera gratuita, con apoyo de la Embajada de la India en México y del Centro Cultural de la India “Gurudev Tagore”, en el 70 aniversario de independencia del país asiático. El Bharatanatyam tiene su origen en el sur del país indio. Cuenta la leyenda que fue traído a la Tierra por Shiva, un

bailarín cósmico, y fue reproduciéndose por generaciones de bailarinas en los templos Devadasi. La danza milenaria requiere un arduo trabajo corporal y mental, que incluye expresividad, música, ritmo y danza. El Bharatanatyam es una de las formas de danza más antigua de la India, surgida en los templos y las cortes, destinada a agradar y venerar a los dioses. Para apreciar la danza se debe tener en cuenta que, imaginativamente, el escenario está situado en el cielo y su público son los dioses, por tal motivo las vestimentas que se utilizan, los movimientos que se emplean y los temas que se desarrollan están estrictamente relacionados con la representación de historias sagradas y épicas para mantener una identidad espiritual relacionada con lo eterno. La palabra Bharatanatyam se divide de la siguiente manera: “Bha” que significa Bhava (expresión); “ra” que viene de Raga (melodía); “ta” que quiere decir Tala (ritmo), y Natyam que consiste en tres niveles: Nritta (movimientos rítmicos y corporales), Nritya (movimientos con Abhinaya, que significa emoción) y Natya (danza dramática). Esta demostración de arte indio, tuvo como ejecutante principal a la internacionalmente reconocida bailarina india Arupa Lahiry.

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Source: https://goo.gl/2mWpsZ

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1.- https://goo.gl/6Bshfu 2.- https://goo.gl/4C6wcy 3.- https://goo.gl/YTC27m 4.- https://goo.gl/JfZuxy 5.- https://goo.gl/zGV1UC 6.- https://goo.gl/ZMupzk 7.-https://goo.gl/6j1FCB 8.- https://goo.gl/RWjXy6 9.- https://goo.gl/MkJSaB 10.- https://goo.gl/cUAcZD 11.- https://goo.gl/7NGwC5 12.-https://goo.gl/vSzynP India in Mexico • January 2018

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Outlook Splurge – December 2017, Vol. 7, pp 62-63 Do you know that India´s well known artist Satish Gujaral has a Mexican connection? In this interview, he talks about his Mexican experience and friendship with iconic Frida Kahlo.

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Useful Information

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Golden Temple located in the city of Amritsar, Punjab, India. Visa Tourism Helpline: 1800 111 363 Short code: 1363 https://incredibleindia.org/

India in Mexico (Embassy of India, Mexico City) Gurudev Tagore Indian cultural Centre

Embassy of India: info.mexico@mea.gov.in GTICC: gticc.mexico@mea.gov.in

@IndEmbMexico @GTICCMEXICO

Embassy of India: 55 31 10 50 & 55 31 10 02 GTICC: 52 03 11 17 & 52 03 06 19

Embassy of India: Musset 325, Col. Polanco, 11550, CDMX GTICC: Anatole France 319, Col. Polanco, 11550, CDMX

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