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In addition to the Sikh Society, the campus hosts Indian societies such as culture (for Indian international students), Hindu youth (Hindu Students Society) and Tamil Cultural Society

This year, the UWA Sikh Society organized an anchor (free community food), which saw great participation and became a major success. (AyraNews24x7)
At the University of Western Australia (UWA), Indian students are creating cultural and trust-based clubs and forming lively communities in the campus which provide a sense of being away from home.
Meet Mehradeep Kaur, a Delhi student who pursues a joint graduate and Master of Economics, who has been living in the university hall since 2023. It recently established the UWA Sikh Society- the first such society in Western Australia. This year, the Society organized an anchor (free community food), with great participation and became a major success.
Talking to AyraNews24x7, Mehradeep said: “In 2023, we were looking for ways to connect our culture and trust and discuss. When we decided to create a Sikh society. Now we have more than 20 people in our committee, with many more events.”
The campus hosts other Indian societies such as Sanskrit (for Indian international students), Hindu Yuva (Hindu Students Society), and Tamil Cultural Society (TCS).
Australia remains one of the top sites for Indian students, in which India is the second largest source of international enrollment in 2024. Students are designed by a strong economy with world class universities, liberal post-study work opportunities and inauguration in areas such as business and healthcare. The Australian government has also strengthened its commitment to welcome Indian students through strong quality assurance standards in education.
This year anchor initiative has become the main attraction of cultural activities in UWA. A student told AyraNews24x7: “Wherever we are, it is very important to practice our trust and culture. Our university supports these activities and even provides money when he is confident. The senior here also advise the juniors here, ensure that they feel at home and are well kept.”
Shiva Ram Velur Celvalumar, a student of a biotechnology, a Chennai, resonated Bhavna: “A year ago, I was completely new and did not know anything. Now things are different because senior people take care of new people. Here, here, senior juniors become guards for senior juniors, and together we enjoy and grow.”
While Indian students nurture society confidence and cultural identity, UWA also provides enterprises – its innovation hub which creates entrepreneurial skills. Through the enterprise, students pitch their ideas to industry experts, often securing money or job opportunities.
Experts say that this combination of overall development – where cultural exchange fulfills innovation – is making UWA an attractive fascinating destination for Indian students.
UWA is ready to take a historic step by setting up complexes in India by 2026. The new structure for the university’s Grants Commission (UGC) approved foreign universities will open its first branch complexes in UWA Chennai and Mumbai, making it one of the first world rank universities to invest in India’s higher education sector.

Kamalika Sengupta is the editor (East) on CNN-NEWS18 / AyraNews24x7.com, focusing on politics, defense and women’s issues. He is an experienced multimedia journalist, out of which more than 20 years of experience is pre -reported …Read more
Kamalika Sengupta is the editor (East) on CNN-NEWS18 / AyraNews24x7.com, focusing on politics, defense and women’s issues. He is an experienced multimedia journalist, out of which more than 20 years of experience is pre -reported … Read more
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