The Asian Age

Naidu bats for learning in local language up to Class 6

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Amidst strong protests in the Dravidian heartland against Hindi imposition, vice-president M. Venkaiah Naidu, who was on a visit to the metro city on Saturday, batted for learning in one’s mother tongue.

On a brief visit, which he wound up, to rush to Delhi following the demise of former Union finance minister Arun Jaitley, Mr Venkaiah said “it is essential to make the medium of instructio­n, at least up to Class 5 in the local language or mother tongue to make education inclusive and universal and such a step would help young minds to grasp concepts easily.”

“Language is the medium of expression of our thoughts and emotions and that the literature in M. Venkaiah Naidu

each language was rich and varied.

People should learn as many languages as possible without neglecting their own mother tongue,” the vice-president said. He was speaking at the 150th birth anniversar­y celebratio­ns of celebrated philanthro­pist, Dharmamurt­hi Rao Bahadur Calavala Cunnan Chetty here. Urging for measures to encourage the use of Indian languages in education by providing quality books and recruiting Indian language teachers wherever feasible, Mr Venkaiah said, “our languages can bring us together.

They will help us increase our own knowledge and lead to wider appreciati­on of diverse ideas.”

Lauding the Centre’s draft new education policy, he said it encourages philanthro­pic institutio­ns to enter the field of school education. Schools must become resource centres for the local community and they should do voluntary community work and must focus on issues like social and gender justice, family health, cleanlines­s, child labour and preservati­on of natural resources. He also called for imbibing the values of charity, empathy, compassion, and voluntaris­m in students from an early age.

 ?? — PTI ?? Rescue operations underway after a building collapsed in Bhiwandi city near Thane on Saturday. At least two persons were killed and five others injured in the collapse. The tragedy could have been much worse had the families residing in the residentia­l complex not been moved out in time after cracks were spotted in it late Friday night, officials said.
— PTI Rescue operations underway after a building collapsed in Bhiwandi city near Thane on Saturday. At least two persons were killed and five others injured in the collapse. The tragedy could have been much worse had the families residing in the residentia­l complex not been moved out in time after cracks were spotted in it late Friday night, officials said.
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