Centre gives ‘classical language’ tag to 5 Indian languages including Marathi, Bengali, and….

Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw asserted that the Narendra Modi government is taking concrete steps to preserve and promote classical languages and safeguard their rich heritage.

Oct 4, 2024 - 01:30
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Centre gives ‘classical language’ tag to 5 Indian languages including Marathi, Bengali, and….

The Central government on Thursday conferred the ‘classical language’ tag to five Indian languages — Marathi, Pali, Prakrit, Assamese and Bengali. The selections to confer the classical language status to those languages changed into taken at a gathering of the Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

“This should be a historical decision and this decision goes okay with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and the NDA government’s philosophy of taking pride in our culture, taking pride in our heritage and taking pride in the whole Indian languages and the rich heritage that we have got got,” said Information and Broadcasting Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw while addressing a cabinet briefing.

Vaishnaw asserted that the Narendra Modi government is taking concrete steps to take care of and promote classical languages and safeguard their rich heritage.

“Till now, we had Tamil, Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam and Odia were the notified classical languages. The central government is taking concrete steps to conserve and promote the classical languages and to take care of the rich heritage of these languages,” the minister said.

‘Classical languages custodian of Bharat’s heritage’

In official statement, the government said that classical languages function a “custodian of Bharat’s profound and ancient cultural heritage, embodying the essence of every community’s historical and cultural milestone.”

As per the statement, a proposal changed into received by the ministry from the Maharashtra government in 2013, soliciting for classical language status to Marathi, which changed into forwarded to the Linguistics Experts Committee (LEC), which later recommended Marathi for classical language.

At some stage in the inter-ministerial consultations on the draft note for cabinet in 2017 for conferring classical status to the Marathi language, the MHA advised to revise the standards and make it stricter. The PMO vide its comment stated that the ministry may conduct an exercise to in sorting out what variety of different languages are at risk of become eligible.

It said that meanwhile, proposals from Bihar, Assam and West Bengal changed into also received for conferring status of classical language to Pali, Prakrit, Assamese and Bengali.

Accordingly, the Linguistics Experts Committee (under Sahitya Akademi) in a gathering on July 25, 2024 unanimously revised the standards as below. The Sahitya Akademi has been appointed as nodal agency for the LEC, the government informed.

The inclusion of languages as Classical Language will create significant employment opportunities, specially in academic and research fields, the statement said.

Additionally, it said the preservation, documentation and digitization of ancient texts of these languages will generate jobs in archiving, translation, publishing and digital media.

The main states involved are Maharashtra (Marathi), Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh (Pali and Prakrit), West Bengal (Bengali) and Assam (Assamese), while the broader cultural and academic impact will extend nationally and internationally.

Notably, assembly elections are due later this year in Maharashtra and this changed right into a chief poll issue in the state.

On October 12, 2004, the Government of India determined to create a new category of languages as “classical languages”,  declaring Tamil as classical language and thereafter Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam and Odia languages were given classical language status.

(With PTI inputs)

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