“India is a vast and diverse nation where every 100 kilometers the language, cuisine, climate, landscape, clothing, and food change.”
What I once wrote with immense pride in my heart is now turning into a nightmare for many of us.
Oh God! I’m in the land of a language I don’t know…
With a growing number of incidents across the Country, mainly in the states of Maharashtra, Karnataka, and West Bengal, where native residents are harassing people from other states to speak only the local language or face dire consequences, the situation has become alarming.
Sitting miles away from these places, I can still see clearly that these are politically motivated actions. Many Maharashtrians are condemning such behavior, where Marathi is being forced on non-Marathi speakers.
A few days ago, I read in The Times of India about a proposed rule that would require schools to teach and communicate in the "mother tongue" or state language until Grade 2. This is worrying for CBSE and international board schools, where both students and teachers come from diverse linguistic backgrounds.
This kind of ‘local language’ enforcement is going to affect:
- Armed forces personnel
- Government officials
- Diplomats
- Doctors
- Bankers
- Students who move across states for education
- Employees who choose companies, not states
- And many more.
The education department must understand a basic truth: young children can pick up languages quickly. And as they grow, whether we like it or not, the common mode of communication is going to be English. English enables them to move across regions—and even countries. We should focus on building a strong foundation while they are young.
Now, let’s address this growing obsession with “My State, My Language ONLY”. What are we trying to achieve through such enforcement? Should Maharashtra only have Marathi speakers? Does Karnataka only have Kannada speakers? West Bengal, only Bengali speakers?
I read an article a few months ago in which a pro-Marathi party worker claimed that the influx of people speaking other languages is causing Marathi to disappear.
Now, if a Marathi parent admits their child to an English-medium or international school for a certain ‘status’ but then expects the school to operate in Marathi, the solution is not to force everyone to speak Marathi. The solution is to admit the child to a Marathi-medium school.
If you want to preserve your language, be creative:
- Organize language festivals
- Promote authors from your state
- Introduce Indian language history in schools
- Provide Indian language options like Telugu, Kannada, Marathi, etc., alongside French or German as an additional/optional language option in schools
- Support regional movies across the country
- Most importantly, speak your language at home so the younger generation stays connected to it
Let’s celebrate India’s diversity, not destroy it with fear.
No Indian should feel alienated in their own country because of the language they speak.
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Important Note:
I understand that this blog may make some people angry or uncomfortable, as their language is being mentioned repeatedly. However, I urge you to be mature enough to recognize that these incidents are not happening across the entire country or in every state. There are a few specific states where this language-related conflict is actively taking place, and I’ve mentioned them here solely to provide context.
Personally, I’ve lived in more than 5–6 Indian states and have received immense warmth and kindness from the native residents. Many of them taught me basic words from their language with love, just so I could manage better, and that is how it should be.
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Image Courtesy: Photo by zhendong wang on Unsplash
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