Hyderabad:We are proud of the fact that India is a linguistic treasure trove, a nation widely acknowledged for its extraordinary linguistic and cultural diversity. The plurality and co-existence of multiple languages add colour and vitality to our country and makes it unique.
However, I am deeply disturbed that we are not doing enough to preserve our rich native languages. Governments need to be doubly careful while adopting policies regarding the medium of education and in particular at the primary and secondary level. Mother tongue lays a strong foundation for the expression of creativity. All efforts shall be made to nurture creativity at the formative stage.
Language is a tool for intellectual and emotional expression. It is a vehicle of intergenerational transmission of culture, scientific knowledge and a worldview. It is the vital, unseen thread that links the past with the present. It evolves with human evolution and gets nourished by constant use.
Our languages are a crucial part of our history, our culture and our evolution as a society. In short, our languages permeate every single facet of our day to day life and form the very basis of our civilization.
In fact, they are the lifeblood of our identity, both individual and collective and our traditions and customs.
They play a significant role in creating and strengthening bonds among people.
More than 19,500 languages and dialects are spoken in India as mother tongues, according to the Language Census. There are 121 languages which are spoken by 10,000 or more people in India.
Languages are never static. They are dynamic, evolving and adapting to the socio-economic milieu around. They grow, shrink, transform, merge, and sadly, die. The great Indian poet Acharya Dandi, had said that if the light of language does not exist, we will be groping in a dark world.
It is extremely disheartening to learn that 196 languages of our country are classified as endangered. We may have to ensure that this number doesn’t increase. We have to protect and preserve our languages and the best and only way is to constantly use them.
I have always emphasized the importance of protecting and conserving our unique and rich linguistic heritage. We cannot afford to lose the treasure we have inherited, the repository of our collective knowledge and wisdom which we have amassed over the course of the long journey of our vibrant civilization. If we neglect our languages, we lose a very precious part of our identity. When a language declines, it takes with it an entire knowledge system and a unique perspective of viewing the universe. The traditional livelihood patterns disappear along with our special skills, arts, crafts, cuisine and trade.
Language preservation and development needs a multi-pronged approach. We must start by making the mother tongue the medium of instruction in our schools and certainly at the primary level. A number of studies conducted all over the world by different expert groups have established the fact that teaching of mother tongue at the initial stages of education gives impetus to the growth of mind and thought and makes children more creative and logical.
Ms Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO, in her message on the occasion of International Mother Language Day (21 February) 2019 has said, “For UNESCO, every mother tongue deserves to be known, recognized and given greater prominence in all spheres of public life. This is not always the case. Mother tongues do not necessarily have national-language status, official-language status, or status as the language of instruction. The situation can lead to the devaluation of a mother tongue and to its ultimate disappearance in the long term.”
In my view, this is a timely, important reminder.
There is a misconception that only English education offers opportunities to grow in the modern world. It's not true. There are only a handful of English speaking countries like Australia, Britain, Canada, the US etc.
Countries like China, Germany, France, Japan, South Korea etc did very well without English education. Knowing English is useful like knowing other international languages. This can't be extended to make a case for supplanting mother tongue with English as some are advocating. It can be learned easily at an appropriate stage after a strong foundation is laid in the mother tongue.
We must take concrete steps to not only have mother tongue as the medium of instruction at the primary level but also take all steps to make it the language of administration, banking and judicial proceedings. For me, it is at the heart of an effective democracy. We have to remove the existing linguistic barriers for realizing the goal of inclusive governance. Wherever there is a government-public interface, it should be invariably in the language people understand.