A brainchild of the university's Vice-Chancellor Rattanlal Hangloo, this is the first time such a centre has been set up in the country.
The vice-chancellor, a Kashmiri by birth, is an ardent admirer of Bengali culture and art and acknowledged Sir Ashutosh Mukhopadhyay as the model vice-chancellor for him.
The Governor in his inaugural speech said that there were some countries in which the diaspora were active setting up a bridge with their motherland, but there were some too where the diaspora were not so active.
Apart from this, he also inaugurated a E-Technology Centre of the Kalyani University.
Among the dignitaries present in the inaugural were: US Consul-General Helen Lafave and Bangladesh Deputy High Commissioner Zokey Ahad.
Sukhen Biswas, a member of the Bengali Diaspora said, "The culture of the Bengali people living abroad will be promoted and preserved in the diaspora at the Kalyani University. In a ward, the joy, woe and love of the Bengali abroad would be shared here."
He hoped the centre would turn into an international platform to discuss the view of Bengali abroad.
"The centre will hold lectures on the issue and later a certificate course will be introduced. We also have a plan to start M. Phil and P.Hd courses in future," Hangloo said.
