There has been much
uproar on the recent statement of the Home Minister Amit Shah, where he urged
the people of the nation to use Hindi as a secondary language after native
languages. He asked people to minimize the use of the English language wherever
possible and replace it with our homegrown Hindi language.
He also made it clear that Hindi subject would be made mandatory in the northeastern region up to class 10.
Now, as usual, brushing the facts inside the carpet and provoking the emotions of people, a particular ecosystem in Assam and other NE states has started narrative labeling this act as a forceful imposition of Hindi. There have been other objections, particularly in Assam, that this is an act to marginalize and replace the Assamese identity of Assam.
Even some of the
outraged people on social media are buying these arguments, and even some are
dubbing it as against the constitution of India that talks about India as a
diverse nation. However, these arguments are antagonistic and far from the
actual reality.
First of all,
nowhere did central Home Minister Amit Shah remarked that the Hindi language
would be used to replace Assamese and other native languages. He stated that
try to use the Hindi language as an alternative to English wherever it is
possible. Secondly, some are spinning a false narrative that making Hindi
compulsory in schools is anti-Assamese.
By this logic, most
schools have English subjects mandatory, so can we dub this also anti-Assamese?
Apart from this New Education Policy currently in the implementation phase,
several schools have provisions for taking education in the native language.
Hence, the students will always have the option to learn and study Assamese and
other native languages.
One more point that
is essential to note is that any state owed native language is confined to a
particular geography or state. This should be preserved at the state or
regional level, and a reasonable discussion and willingness should come from
the people of a state or state government itself to safeguard and promote a
particular regional language like Assamese. However, it should not hinder
people from learning a language like Hindi, which is of national importance and
can prove worthwhile to overcome language barriers to communicate across the
nation.
We are at the age
of globalization, and we need some ways to co-exist by exploring common
unification points. At the global level, it is English. At the national level,
it is indisputably Hindi as it is the most used language in India, and even if
some may not be an expert on this, but most people understand this language.
States like Assam need individuals from other parts of India to come and invest
in the state to bring employment and growth. To accomplish this, language
should not become a deterrent for others and even for the people of Assam.
It is also ironic
to see that Assam Congress and central congress leaders are hell-bent on
establishing that by imposing the Hindi language, the BJP is fulfilling the
commands of RSS. But the fact that you all must know is that the Congress party
itself presented recommendations to promote Hindi by forming a committee when
Congress was in power.
This committee was
led by a Tamil politician and the then home minister of India, P. Chidambaram.
This exposes the agenda and hypocrisy of the Congress party on the Hindi
language.
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