The events on October 1 and yesterday included a lecture and a caricature exhibition featuring the 'Father of the Nation'.
The Indian envoy here Sanjay Bhattacharyya said that Gandhi continues to be relevant and that his principles inspired people and provided guidance to civilisations across time and boundaries.
"We should always have confidence that the spirit of non- violence is actually very powerful. Gandhi used to say 'if no body else is coming with you please go alone'. Each of us as individuals need to do this individually and then collectively to bring back peach and love to this world," Bhattacharyya told PTI.
Bakshi gave two speeches - the first one was in Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Alexandria on Sunday entitled 'After Gandhi: Promise and Peril of Non-Violence'.
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She also gave another lecture entitled 'Non-Violence: A Temptation and Challenge' at the Maulana Azad Centre for Indian Culture in Cairo on the Mahatma's birthday which is also recognised as the International Day of Non-Violence by the UN.
"Gandhi's philosophy is relevant today because people are tired of violence and it is only natural for human to want to live in peace.
"Violence is a reality in our lives but it doesn't have to dominate us," she added.
The event also featured an exhibition on the theme 'Spirit of Gandhi' by the Egyptian Caricature Society in collaboration with the Embassy of India in Cairo.
"This year we have worked again with the Caricature Society which we haven't done the last two years on this theme. We worked on the spirit of Gandhi and we got 73 contributions from artists from 24 countries and we put them into a booklet," Bhattacharyya said.
"Each one of the artists who participated in the exhibition painted Gandhi through his own point of view so there are different paintings and styles," Farahat told PTI.
In addition to caricatures by artists from India, Egypt, Brazil, Colombia, Spain, Greece, China, Italy, US, Indonesia and other countries, a booklet, entitled 'Spirit of Gandhi', includes two articles, one of them is written in Al-Ahram newspaper in 2002 about Gandhi's visit to Egypt in 1930s and the second article is by artist K G Subramanyan, originally written in 1995, and gives an artist's perspective of Gandhi.