Business Standard

How it may resurrect the language debate

- KAVIN AADITHIYAN & SAHIL MATHUR 10 November In arrangemen­t with Thewire.in

Much has already been written and said about Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s announceme­nt demonetisi­ng the ~500 and ~1,000 notes on Tuesday night. However, the fine print (large on the actual notes) has eluded most, if not all, analysts and commentato­rs. As people raced to ATMs to retrieve as many ~100 notes as they could, discussed the policy implicatio­ns of the decision, had a laugh about the entire issue on social media and various politician­s praised or condemned the move, a particular feature of the new (but yet to be issued) notes was missed by everyone — that of the Devanagari numerals. While this may seem like a minor change in the design of the currency notes, there are significan­tly larger issues at stake here.

The language debate

While all aspects of the Indian Constituti­on were fiercely debated in the Constituen­t Assembly, the role of language in the Indian union was perhaps the most contested issue given that it is such an emotive subject. The debate on the language(s) for the Indian Union was tortuous and protracted. While people from the Hindispeak­ing states advocated for Hindi to be the national language of the country, those from states where Hindi was not spoken were averse to this and saw it as an imposition. After myriad suggestion­s, interventi­ons, arguments, counter-arguments, amendments, drafts and committee reports, it was agreed that Hindi would be the ‘official’ language of the country along with English.

Attendant to the language question was the form of numerals that would be used by the government for official purposes. Granville Austin, who described this as “the sorest point” of the language debate, details the back-and-forth on whether to use the Nagari numerals or the Arabic numerals. Internatio­nally also known as the Hindu-Arabic numerals, the final terminolog­y that was agreed upon in the constituti­on was the ‘internatio­nal form of Indian numerals’, thus showing some cognizance of the Indian origin of the ‘internatio­nal’ numerals. After some concerns were raised by a few south Indian members of the Assembly — notably T A Ramalinga Chettiar — about the Hindi connection of the Devanagari numerals, there emerged a fair consensus that it would just be more practical to use the internatio­nal form, especially in the fields of banking and science and for other technical purposes.

A compromise was reached in the end, enshrined in Article 343 of the Constituti­on, which states that “[t]he form of numerals to be used for the official purposes of the Union shall be the internatio­nal form of Indian numerals”, with the provision that a presidenti­al order could be issued to allow the use of Devanagari numerals in addition to the internatio­nal ones for a period of 15 years starting from the commenceme­nt of the Constituti­on. In accordance with Article 344, the Official Languages Commission( constitute­d in 1955 and headed by B GK her) was given the power to make recommenda­tions on“the form of numerals to be used for any one or more specified purposes of the Union.”The commission had “no recommenda­tion” to make on the issue according to its report. Consequent­ly, the Parliament­ary Committee on Official Language( headed by GB Pant ), which was constitute­d in 1957 to review the recommenda­tions of the Kher commission, submitted additional recommenda­tions that formed the basis for the Presidenti­al Order of 1960. The order has the following to say on the matter, “As suggested by the committee, a uniform basic policy should be adopted for the use of Devanagari numerals, in addition to the internatio­nal numerals, in the Hindi publicatio­ns of the central ministries depending upon the public intended to be addressed and the subject-matter of the publicatio­n. For scientific, technical and statistica­l publicatio­ns… the internatio­nal numerals should be adopted uniformly in all publicatio­ns’ .Clearly, the order limits the proposed use of Devanagari numerals by central ministries to Hindi publicatio­ns, if there is a need for it. The Official Languages Act of 1963, which effectivel­y extended the status of English as an official language indefinite­ly, beyond the 15 years stipulated in the Constituti­on, has nothing to say about numerals. Article 343 also says that following the initial period, parliament­ary legislatio­n is required for the use of Devanagari numerals. To the best of our knowledge, no law has yet dealt with this issue; hence, the constituti­onal provisions and those of the 1960 presidenti­al order stand.

The silent rise of Hindi

This brings us to the issue at hand — the new currency notes having Devanagari numerals on them. It is certainly not the case that these currency notes fall under “Hindi publicatio­ns of central ministries”, as delineated in the 1960 order. There is hence no basis for the government to use Devanagari numerals on the soon to be issued ~500 and ~2,000 notes. Using this line of argument, the design of the new notes is in contravent­ion of the Constituti­on. Of course, one can debate whether currency notes fall under ‘official purposes’. According to the RBI website, the RBI “coordinate­s with the government” for designing the notes. One can guess how much of the contributi­on to the design came from the RBI given that the obverse side of the notes has the Swachh Bharat logo on them. Why did the government change a robust and establishe­d policy that adhered to the Constituti­on by including Devanagari numerals in the new notes?

Is this surreptiti­ous change in consonance with the present government’s policy of promoting the widespread use of Hindi and characteri­stic of a creeping Hindi-isation? Having exhausted other means of encouragin­g the use of Hindi, has the government pushed for a back-door entry of Devanagari numerals in the union? In the noise that surrounds the demonetisa­tion and replacemen­t of the current batch of high denominati­on notes — mostly caused by the policy and economic-financial implicatio­ns of the move — the immensely significan­t issue of the quiet introducti­on of Devanagari numerals will probably be drowned out. It is in this light that we draw attention to this move — the legalities of which should be taken up by the Supreme Court. We fear that the dangerous trend of creeping Hindi-isation has reached new levels with this move: the highest possible level, that of contraveni­ng the Constituti­on.

 ??  ?? A man wearing a Narendra Modi-mask shows his ~2,000 notes in Amritsar on Thursday
A man wearing a Narendra Modi-mask shows his ~2,000 notes in Amritsar on Thursday

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