SHANGHAI, Nov. 4 (Xinhua) -- China on Tuesday
launched an English training program for Buddhist followers to better prepare
them for foreign exchange.
The program, organized by the China Religious Culture
Communication Association (CRCCA) and the Buddhist Association of China (BAC),
opened at the Shanghai International Studies University.
Qi Xiaofei, deputy head of the CRCCA, said at the
opening ceremony that the half-year course would train translators and
interpreters for the Second World Buddhist Forum, scheduled to be held in China
next year.
More than 20 Buddhist followers from monasteries
nationwide, who had a certain level of English proficiency, were selected for
the training.
Qi said he hoped the project would serve as a
beginning course to attract more Buddhist followers to learn foreign languages
so that China could have more followers with a global view.
Elder Master Yicheng, president of the BAC, said that
with the rise of China's national strength, exchanges between the Chinese
Buddhist circle and those elsewhere in the world had become more frequent.
It was imperative for China to train people who could
spread Buddhist teachings in other languages and the program was a step in that
direction, he said.
China hosted the first World Buddhist Forum in April
2006.