Justifying the case for selfishness
Please do not read further if you can't recognise or appreciate sarcasm.
A recent article on BBC said that the growth in number of English speakers in India is too slow! Some nationalists and great souls who can survive without a functional brain would rejoice on reading this. They are not without good reason to do so. English proficiency is inevitable for development of the nation as a whole, but surely not if you are hell-bent on keeping the socio-economic hierarchy dictated by the caste system undisturbed. It is only as long as the current elites keep the English knowledge and education to themselves (and make sure that the poor stay the way they are) that these elites can enjoy the fruits of capitalism. We can ask the child born for illiterate parents to study three languages. Obviously the child fails to pass the exams because his /her parents can not teach the child themselves nor can they afford to hire private tutors. We are free to pretend that we do not know that North Indian and South Indian languages are very different (by script, grammar, vocabulary and origin) and stay adamant in refusing that it is cruel to expect the three language formula has a norm in a nation with such low literacy rate. But, these are no big issues since we should care less about lesser beings nor it is a great loss for mankind, isn’t it? After all, every poor child that drops out of school would mean one more slave for our children, one more slum dweller whom we can look down with disgust and one more antisocial who we loath for being so insensitive about "our" sentiments and wellbeing.
As Professor Hardgrave of University of Texas explains the North [India] was and is keen to stuff Hindi on the South, but least bothered to learn anything about the South. Why should the North anyways be bothered about the sambar eating, ennada rascala talking, sweaty faced, dark skinned, annoyed and irritated (and irritating) southerners? Funny enough the three language policy itself is in place because we all know that English is vital to our survival. But why do we have more languages added to English? We do that, supposedly, because we need an Indian language to be the link language for all Indians to communicate with each other and not a foreign tongue. Hindi descends from Sanskrit which which has been unequivocally proven to be born in Afghan-Iran border regions which got a bit mutated in India (as Khariboli) and absorbing Persian and Arabic into it. It is indeed a very truly and natively Indian language, which some might foolishly claim to fall short of any qualifications of the Dravidian languages, which which are born and bred in the subcontinent. Well, but the Dravidian languages don't have good numbers of speakers isn't it? Next step is to dethrone the tiger as the national animal and give that seat to rats – the same with peacock too for crows. Numbers matter – it always does!
On NDTV's Big fight debate on the “language debacle in India” the sole surviving Gandhian, Mr N. D Tiwari, aptly pointed out that Hindi was the language used in the freedom struggle and that of Gandhi. Why would or should he or any of his battalion go through the annals of history that it was imposition of Hindi over Urdu that played a major role to the nation being partitioned or the fact that Gandhi wanted every child to learn at least 5 languages at school before she/he would learn science or maths, and every kid should learn to draw before they do to write. I'm sure all of these supporters of cause of Hindi as link language have bothered to read the Mahatma's biography – after all they are using his name as a reason.
We should care less if India's progress is dragged down at the cost of imposing Hindi on rest of the population. Let us be proud to be foolishly selfish!


9 Comments:
Sarcasm-we can understand...
But the bitterness against the north is what we find unjustifiable.
Knowing more languages does not dull a person's mind. It just enhances their cultural exposure!
I, for one, am furious they dint teach me hindi properly at the school level, lest i will be able to watch proper hindi movies now without having to guess watz happening on screen!
As long as it is not forced, y is this 50's attitude of black shirts against hindi???!!
Its, after all, just a language. Stop giving it cultural implications!
And if u want to make the desis speak English faster... IMPROVE the quality of education!! QUALITY of english teaching at schools!!
Plz do not spew hatred unnecessarily.. :)
Thanks for the comment.
However, it would have been nice if you had actually read the blog before you left the message. It is funny to see that you think I am anti-North. My friends would find it laughable as most of them are from above the Vindhyas. I am married to a non-Tamil myself!
You might want to read up on excellent literature available on the subject of this blog by Kancha Illaya, BR Ambedkar, Gail Omvedt, Richard Hardgrave, Duncan Forester, Sarah Dicky etc before concluding that the socio-economic impact of Hindi-imposition is a theory congealed in my mind.
If someone wants to learn Hindi and the parents have the means to support, he or she can learn it privately. After all, you want to watch Hindi movies, not write novels!
Where in the blog did you see the black-shirt mentality? This blog is an abstract of ideas presented in several books and scholarly peer-reviewed journals. These books are just left for the eyes of the readers and my idea is to present it to those who want to know the issues in the simplest language that the subject can afford.
As for your comment on quality of education: Yes of course. That is exactly the point of this blog. We need to revisit the education policy in India and stop wasting the kids’ time and energy on unnecessary stuff.
FYI: I wrote a blog entry supporting Bihar and UP people [The North Indians] in this same series. You can’t amuse me more than calling me anti-North! In actual matter of fact, your comment supports my thesis here. You are unable to understand the blog because you were not taught good English.
And dear author...
Would u plz be kind enough to show us in which 'scholarly, peer-reviewed journal', it has been proved that being privy to more than one language is harmful to the child as such?
A few of them that spell out in specific the Hindi issue:
Forrester D, (1966) Pacific Affairs. 39: 19-36
Forrester D, (1970) Pacific Affairs. 43: 5-21
Davey G, (1972) Asian Survey. 12: 701-716
Ramaswamy (1999) International Journal of the Sociology of Language 140: 1-28
Hope they help!
:):)
That seals the issue!
Good!
Lets ape the thoughts put forth by intelligent men (shudnt they be, if theirs are peer-reviewed??), instead of talking something logical ourselves!!
Wud it bother u so much if the extra language to be studied is something other than Hindi?? or not even national?? Something like Spanish or French even??
It would have been great if you had asked me this question first! Why would I want to waste anyone’s time on learning a language which is not required for basic development (like Spanish and French)? English is the ligua franca. If you have been to France or Spain you would know that their youth can speak English.
BTW: please remember it would be easier for me to delete the comments rather than replying to them. I do that because I believe that I hold a responsibility to the society and thus clarify my stance. If you were not for accepting peer-reviewed journal papers, why ask for them?
//If you have been to France or Spain you would know that their youth can speak English. //
Honestly, Mr. Sanjay, please dont waltz around throwing statements in the air.. :):)
What % of the populace in France do speak English?? Around 35% ??
And we shouldnt learn Spanish, d second most spoken language of the developed world, because it is not the 'lingua franca'??
Our next gen should learn proficient English and work in high end call centres??
Please read the response before you comment. I clearly said the “youth”, not the middle aged and the retired. Almost all of the younger generation can use English in France and Germany. As for Spain it is comparatively less, but if you still didn’t know this about Spain – Spanish too is not spoken in many parts of Spain.
FYI: Spanish speaking countries are learning English. We Indians have had an earlier start in the language. However we are lacking behind because of wrong education policies. This is exactly the point of the blog post. It is a shame that you are posting messages without even trying to read and reason.
If you have genuine comments on this issue, I will publish and reply to them. If you are not going to make any sense, it is your own time you are wasting.
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