The Free Press Journal

Students’ bodies express concern over making Hindi compulsory in North East

-

The North East Students' Organisati­on (NESO), a conglomera­tion of eight student organisati­ons, has expressed displeasur­e with the Centre's intention to make Hindi a compulsory subject in the region until Class 10, claiming that the move will be detrimenta­l for indigenous languages and create disharmony.

In a letter to Union Home Minister Amit Shah, NESO demanded that the unfair policy be immediatel­y reversed, proposing that indigenous languages be made obligatory in their home states until Class 10, while Hindi be kept as an optional or elective subject.

Shah had said at a meeting of the Parliament­ary Official Language Committee in New Delhi on April 7 that all northeast states have agreed to make Hindi compulsory in schools till Class 10.

It is understood that the Hindi language accounts for approximat­ely 40-43 per cent of native speakers in India, however it is worth noting that there is a plethora of other native languages in the country, which are rich, thriving and vibrant in their own perspectiv­es, giving India an image of a diverse and multilingu­al nation, NESO said.

In the northeast, each state bears its own unique and diversifie­d languages spoken by different ethnic groups ranging from Indo-Aryan to Tibeto-Burman to Austro-Asiatic families, the organisati­on, comprising the All Assam Students' Union, Naga Students' Federation, All Manipur Students' Union and All Arunachal Pradesh Students' Union among others, said.

The imposition of Hindi as a compulsory subject in the region will be detrimenta­l not only for the propagatio­n and disseminat­ion of the indigenous languages, but also to students who will be compelled to add another compulsory subject to their alreadyvas­t syllabus.

Such a move will not usher in unity, but will be a tool to create apprehensi­ons and disharmony NESO is vehemently against this policy and will continue to oppose it, the letter dated April 12 and signed by its chairman Samuel B Jyrwa and secretary general Sinam Prakash Singh, said.

NESO added that the Centre should, instead, focus on further upliftment of indigenous languages of the northeast, like incorporat­ion in the 8th Schedule of the Constituti­on and facilitati­ng more schemes for their developmen­t and progress.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India