
Language rows rage in India as ruling party pushes Hindi – DW – 07/15/2025
India's Home Minister Amit Shah recently said that those who speak English in the South Asian country would "soon feel ashamed."
He also urged people to speak their mother tongue with pride. "I believe that the languages of our country are the jewels of our culture. Without our languages, we cease to be truly Indian," he said.
He emphasized that India should lead globally through its own languages instead of using English.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has also been increasingly giving precedence to Hindi over English in official work.
Legal directives require Hindi in official communication, documentation, courts, and recruitment, especially in Hindi-speaking states, aiming to boost Hindi's role and reduce dependence on English.
The push to elevate Hindi, however, has been controversial — particularly in non-Hindi-speaking states.
Language is a touchy subject in the world's most populous country, where its 1.4 billion people speak a mosaic of over a hundred languages and thousands of dialects.
India does not have a single "national language." Instead, it now has 22 official languages. At the federal level, both Hindi and English are designated as official languages, while individual states have adopted one or more regional languages as their official languages.
The nation's internal, state boundaries are also drawn mostly along linguistic lines.
Hindi is the country's most-spoken language with more than 43% of the population (more than 528 million people) able to communicate in it, as per the last census held in 2011. It's followed by Bengali, Marathi, Telugu and Tamil.
"Unlike Western nation-states that are mostly monolingual, India embraces multiple official languages, reflecting its rich linguistic diversity, from which this tension arises," said Dwaipayan Bhattacharya, a professor at the Center for Political Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi.
To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video
Attempts were made in the past to make Hindi the sole official language at the federal level, but they all met stiff resistance in non-Hindi-speaking regions.
Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), however, has long campaigned for the promotion of Hindi.
Prafulla Ketkar, editor of Organizer, the mouthpiece of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the BJP's ideological parent, said, "English as a colonial legacy should be replaced by Indian languages. Hindi serves as a communication medium with the Union without undermining other languages, as every Indian language holds national importance."
While the BJP insists it wants to promote all native Indian languages — not just Hindi — its attempts to expand the usage of Hindi have been contentious, with critics accusing New Delhi of trying to impose Hindi on non-Hindi-speaking states.
Southern states, whose languages don't have much in common with Hindi, have particularly opposed the Hindi push.
"Hindi is as foreign for non-Hindi-speaking states as English," said Samuel Asir Raj, a sociologist and formerly a professor at Manonmaniam Sundaranar University in Tirunelveli.
In the western state of Maharashtra, which is run by the BJP, the government recently announced that young pupils would be taught Hindi as a third language. But a fierce backlash quickly forced it to scrap the move.
In Tamil Nadu, Chief Minister MK Stalin has been engaged in a bitter row with Modi's government over language policy.
The dispute centers around India's National Education Policy (NEP), first introduced in 1968 and recently updated by the Modi government in 2020.
The original policy envisioned a three-language formula.
Hindi-speaking states in northern India had to teach Hindi, English and a third Indian language in school. Non-Hindi-speaking states, meanwhile, would teach the regional language, Hindi and English.
When revised in 2020, the NEP retained the three-language formula but offered more flexibility for states to choose the three languages. It, however, mandated that at least two of the languages must be native to India, although Hindi is not mandatory.
Tamil Nadu, though, has remained a fierce opponent of the policy and wanted to stick with teaching its school children just two languages — Tamil and English. And it views the three-language plan as an attempt to impose Hindi on the state through the backdoor.
Concerns over federalism and cultural identity have also fueled resistance.
"South India's opposition to the NEP isn't about Hindi itself, but about the central government using the policy to culturally appropriate their identity," said Raj, the sociologist.
Despite the Modi government's push for Hindi, the use of English in India remains widespread, including in education, commerce and courts, even in Hindi-speaking regions.
People across the country view learning the language as key to upward economic and social mobility. They increasingly send their children to English-medium schools, in the hope that it would help them gain access to better and higher-paying jobs.
Against this backdrop, it's unlikely that Hindi will completely replace English in India anytime soon.
But Hindi has been spreading across the country in recent years, thanks to the Hindi film industry, or Bollywood, which has popularized the Hindi language in non-Hindi-speaking areas. Migration from northern, Hindi-speaking regions to southern states has also contributed to the spread.
Bhattacharya said the Modi government's "heavy financial support" for Hindi "creates a sense of imposition."
He called for a dialogue between New Delhi and state governments to put an end to the language disputes."Unity should not mean uniformity imposed by the state. While this may spark regional opposition, it won't lead to major conflict. Ultimately, dialogue and compromise between the center and states are essential to resolve these tensions."
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DW
7 hours ago
- DW
Language rows rage in India as ruling party pushes Hindi – DW – 07/15/2025
People who speak English in India will "soon feel ashamed," according to a senior government minister from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party. But the party's efforts to promote Hindi are facing an escalating backlash. India's Home Minister Amit Shah recently said that those who speak English in the South Asian country would "soon feel ashamed." He also urged people to speak their mother tongue with pride. "I believe that the languages of our country are the jewels of our culture. Without our languages, we cease to be truly Indian," he said. He emphasized that India should lead globally through its own languages instead of using English. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has also been increasingly giving precedence to Hindi over English in official work. Legal directives require Hindi in official communication, documentation, courts, and recruitment, especially in Hindi-speaking states, aiming to boost Hindi's role and reduce dependence on English. The push to elevate Hindi, however, has been controversial — particularly in non-Hindi-speaking states. Language is a touchy subject in the world's most populous country, where its 1.4 billion people speak a mosaic of over a hundred languages and thousands of dialects. India does not have a single "national language." Instead, it now has 22 official languages. At the federal level, both Hindi and English are designated as official languages, while individual states have adopted one or more regional languages as their official languages. The nation's internal, state boundaries are also drawn mostly along linguistic lines. Hindi is the country's most-spoken language with more than 43% of the population (more than 528 million people) able to communicate in it, as per the last census held in 2011. It's followed by Bengali, Marathi, Telugu and Tamil. "Unlike Western nation-states that are mostly monolingual, India embraces multiple official languages, reflecting its rich linguistic diversity, from which this tension arises," said Dwaipayan Bhattacharya, a professor at the Center for Political Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Attempts were made in the past to make Hindi the sole official language at the federal level, but they all met stiff resistance in non-Hindi-speaking regions. Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), however, has long campaigned for the promotion of Hindi. Prafulla Ketkar, editor of Organizer, the mouthpiece of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the BJP's ideological parent, said, "English as a colonial legacy should be replaced by Indian languages. Hindi serves as a communication medium with the Union without undermining other languages, as every Indian language holds national importance." While the BJP insists it wants to promote all native Indian languages — not just Hindi — its attempts to expand the usage of Hindi have been contentious, with critics accusing New Delhi of trying to impose Hindi on non-Hindi-speaking states. Southern states, whose languages don't have much in common with Hindi, have particularly opposed the Hindi push. "Hindi is as foreign for non-Hindi-speaking states as English," said Samuel Asir Raj, a sociologist and formerly a professor at Manonmaniam Sundaranar University in Tirunelveli. In the western state of Maharashtra, which is run by the BJP, the government recently announced that young pupils would be taught Hindi as a third language. But a fierce backlash quickly forced it to scrap the move. In Tamil Nadu, Chief Minister MK Stalin has been engaged in a bitter row with Modi's government over language policy. The dispute centers around India's National Education Policy (NEP), first introduced in 1968 and recently updated by the Modi government in 2020. The original policy envisioned a three-language formula. Hindi-speaking states in northern India had to teach Hindi, English and a third Indian language in school. Non-Hindi-speaking states, meanwhile, would teach the regional language, Hindi and English. When revised in 2020, the NEP retained the three-language formula but offered more flexibility for states to choose the three languages. It, however, mandated that at least two of the languages must be native to India, although Hindi is not mandatory. Tamil Nadu, though, has remained a fierce opponent of the policy and wanted to stick with teaching its school children just two languages — Tamil and English. And it views the three-language plan as an attempt to impose Hindi on the state through the backdoor. Concerns over federalism and cultural identity have also fueled resistance. "South India's opposition to the NEP isn't about Hindi itself, but about the central government using the policy to culturally appropriate their identity," said Raj, the sociologist. Despite the Modi government's push for Hindi, the use of English in India remains widespread, including in education, commerce and courts, even in Hindi-speaking regions. People across the country view learning the language as key to upward economic and social mobility. They increasingly send their children to English-medium schools, in the hope that it would help them gain access to better and higher-paying jobs. Against this backdrop, it's unlikely that Hindi will completely replace English in India anytime soon. But Hindi has been spreading across the country in recent years, thanks to the Hindi film industry, or Bollywood, which has popularized the Hindi language in non-Hindi-speaking areas. Migration from northern, Hindi-speaking regions to southern states has also contributed to the spread. Bhattacharya said the Modi government's "heavy financial support" for Hindi "creates a sense of imposition." He called for a dialogue between New Delhi and state governments to put an end to the language disputes."Unity should not mean uniformity imposed by the state. While this may spark regional opposition, it won't lead to major conflict. Ultimately, dialogue and compromise between the center and states are essential to resolve these tensions."


DW
7 hours ago
- DW
India: Language rows erupt as BJP pushes Hindi – DW – 07/15/2025
People who speak English in India would "soon feel ashamed," according to a senior government minister from the ruling Bharatiya Janata Party. But the party's efforts to promote Hindi are facing escalating backlash. India's Home Minister Amit Shah recently said that those who speak English in the South Asian country would "soon feel ashamed." He also urged people to speak their mother tongue with pride. "I believe that the languages of our country are the jewels of our culture. Without our languages, we cease to be truly Indian," he said. He emphasized that India should lead globally through its own languages instead of using English. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government has also been increasingly giving precedence to Hindi over English in official work. Legal directives require Hindi in official communication, documentation, courts, and recruitment, especially in Hindi-speaking states, aiming to boost Hindi's role and reduce dependence on English. The push to elevate Hindi, however, has been controversial — particularly in non-Hindi-speaking states. Language is a touchy subject in the world's most populous country, where its 1.4 billion people speak a mosaic of over a hundred languages and thousands of dialects. India does not have a single "national language." Instead, it now has 22 official languages. At the federal level, both Hindi and English are designated as official languages, while individual states have adopted one or more regional languages as their official languages. The nation's internal, state boundaries are also drawn mostly along linguistic lines. Hindi is the country's most-spoken language with more than 43% of the population (more than 528 million people) able to communicate in it, as per the last census held in 2011. It's followed by Bengali, Marathi, Telugu and Tamil. "Unlike Western nation-states that are mostly monolingual, India embraces multiple official languages, reflecting its rich linguistic diversity, from which this tension arises," said Dwaipayan Bhattacharya, a professor at the Center for Political Studies at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Attempts were made in the past to make Hindi the sole official language at the federal level, but they all met stiff resistance in non-Hindi-speaking regions. Modi's ruling Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), however, has long campaigned for the promotion of Hindi. Prafulla Ketkar, editor of Organizer, the mouthpiece of the Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS), the BJP's ideological parent, said, "English as a colonial legacy should be replaced by Indian languages. Hindi serves as a communication medium with the Union without undermining other languages, as every Indian language holds national importance." While the BJP insists it wants to promote all native Indian languages — not just Hindi — its attempts to expand the usage of Hindi have been contentious, with critics accusing New Delhi of trying to impose Hindi on non-Hindi-speaking states. Southern states, whose languages don't have much in common with Hindi, have particularly opposed the Hindi push. "Hindi is as foreign for non-Hindi-speaking states as English," said Samuel Asir Raj, a sociologist and formerly a professor at Manonmaniam Sundaranar University in Tirunelveli. In the western state of Maharashtra, which is run by the BJP, the government recently announced that young pupils would be taught Hindi as a third language. But a fierce backlash quickly forced it to scrap the move. In Tamil Nadu, Chief Minister MK Stalin has been engaged in a bitter row with Modi's government over language policy. The dispute centers around India's National Education Policy (NEP), first introduced in 1968 and recently updated by the Modi government in 2020. The original policy envisioned a three-language formula. Hindi-speaking states in northern India had to teach Hindi, English and a third Indian language in school. Non-Hindi-speaking states, meanwhile, would teach the regional language, Hindi and English. When revised in 2020, the NEP retained the three-language formula but offered more flexibility for states to choose the three languages. It, however, mandated that at least two of the languages must be native to India, although Hindi is not mandatory. Tamil Nadu, though, has remained a fierce opponent of the policy and wanted to stick with teaching its school children just two languages — Tamil and English. And it views the three-language plan as an attempt to impose Hindi on the state through the backdoor. Concerns over federalism and cultural identity have also fueled resistance. "South India's opposition to the NEP isn't about Hindi itself, but about the central government using the policy to culturally appropriate their identity," said Raj, the sociologist. Despite the Modi government's push for Hindi, the use of English in India remains widespread, including in education, commerce and courts, even in Hindi-speaking regions. People across the country view learning the language as key to upward economic and social mobility. They increasingly send their children to English-medium schools, in the hope that it would help them gain access to better and higher-paying jobs. Against this backdrop, it's unlikely that Hindi will completely replace English in India anytime soon. But Hindi has been spreading across the country in recent years, thanks to the Hindi film industry, or Bollywood, which has popularized the Hindi language in non-Hindi-speaking areas. Migration from northern, Hindi-speaking regions to southern states has also contributed to the spread. Bhattacharya said the Modi government's "heavy financial support" for Hindi "creates a sense of imposition." He called for a dialogue between New Delhi and state governments to put an end to the language disputes."Unity should not mean uniformity imposed by the state. While this may spark regional opposition, it won't lead to major conflict. Ultimately, dialogue and compromise between the center and states are essential to resolve these tensions."


Int'l Business Times
12 hours ago
- Int'l Business Times
Inclusivity and Traditional Indian Wisdom: A Blueprint for Eternal Prosperity
In a time of ideological divisions, fractured global dialogues, and rising individualism, the world searches for systems that don't merely tolerate diversity but celebrate it. Few cultures preach this profound idea: Unity through diversity. At the heart of India's millennia-old spiritual wisdom lies an inclusive worldview, which isn't just philosophical, but intensely lived. And perhaps, no recent event brought this philosophy to global attention as powerfully as the wedding of Anant Ambani in July 2024. While the event captivated international headlines for its grandeur and guest list, its more profound message was subtle yet striking: Inclusivity anchored in tradition. Held in Mumbai, the wedding wasn't merely a union between two individuals; it was a confluence of faith, heritage, and global harmony. From Silicon Valley to Saudi Arabia, from spiritual gurus to sovereign leaders, the guest list embodied the world in dialogue. Political dignitaries like John Kerry, Tony Blair, and President Samia Suluhu Hassan, among others, stood side by side with ISKCON monks, Shankaracharyas, and Vedic scholars. The wedding was not just about opulence—it was a reflection of how family values and spiritual discipline remain central to Indian tradition, even amidst modern success. The Ambanis' decision to follow ancient Vedic rituals, to include a mass wedding of underprivileged couples, and to serve over 1,000 meals daily through a bhandara (community kitchen), turned a private celebration into a world benchmark on compassionate wealth. From the resplendent Banaras-themed décor to the Valley of Gods performance led by Nita Ambani, the ceremonies radiated cultural richness while staying anchored in humility and service. Guests from all backgrounds, dressed 'Resplendently Indian,' became part of a shared experience—united not by uniformity, but by reverence. What made this moment so powerful wasn't just the scale or symbolism; it was the spirit of inclusion that permeated it all. In an increasingly segmented world, where difference often leads to distrust, India offered an alternative: difference as a divine deed. Just as Lord Krishna teaches in the Hindu scripture sacred book 'Shrimad Bhagavad Gita' that truth wears many faces, this wedding reminded the world that tradition can be expansive, not exclusive. That wealth, when paired with wisdom, becomes a force for upliftment. And that cultural diplomacy, when rooted in authenticity, has the power to heal global narratives. This layered, open-hearted approach to truth is the essence of Indian inclusivity, and it was this same spirit that the Ambani wedding reflected to the world.