Essay about OUR NATIONAL LANGUAGE

OUR NATIONAL LANGUAGE

Hindi is our national language and English has been retained as an Associate National Language, due to insistent and persistent demand from South India where the people in Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh, Karnataka and Kerala, do not properly understand Hindi and they do not want that Hindi should be imposed on them, which in their misguided view is a language of the North and not of the South. In the beginning it was planned to retain English for ten years as lingua franca-language used for general communication in the country— but now it has been declared as an Associated National Language and is being retained indefinitely until Hindi becomes the true National Language.

Hindi is indeed the National Language adopted by the Constituent Assembly soon after the achievement of independence in 1947. But millions in India still do not know Hindi. It is because it has been made difficult by the introduction of Sanskrit terms in it. The conception of Mahatma Gandhi and Subhash Chandra Bose of Hindi as a national language was that of Hindustani-— a mixture of Hindi and Urdu. But over the years Hindi has become very much Sanskritised. Purshottamlal Tandon, the U.P. Leader, was responsible for this form of Hindi.

Over the years Hindi has been made so difficult that many people from Uttar Pradesh, where it is the mother tongue, do not properly understand it. When I was teaching in Ghaziabad, in examination many students sought my help for explaining to them the meaning of questions given in Hindi. Hindi was their mother tongue and they could not understand the question papers which were set in Hindi. Of course, I could not help them because I cannot read Hindi, although I can speak it. I do not understand many of it’s highly Sanskritised terms. In fact, hardly any student sought my help in understanding question paper in English which was my subject, and students of U.P. understood English question papers better than Hindi question papers. Is that not ironical?

In fact Mr. Jawaharlal Nehru, the Prime Minister of India, once said “I do not understand the address in Hindi which is presented to me”.

That is the real trouble with our national language. There is too much of Sanskrit introduced in it. If we want to make it a national language, it should be simplified and lowered to the level of Hindustani—a mixture of Hindi and Urdu— as Mahatma Gandhi and Subhash Chandra Bose suggested. Subhash Chandra Bose in fact went even further and suggested that Hindi should be written in the Roman Script. If Hindi is simplified and written in the Roman Script, it will be easily accepted by the South India as the national language of India and there will be no need to consider English as the Associate National Language.

  Government of India is spending crores of rupees every year on the propogation of Hindi in the country but this money is going down the drain because common people cannot understand the Sanskrit terms introduced by the Hindi scholars and academicians to show their scholarship. Let us simplify Hindi and introduce it in Roman Script as Subhash Chandra Bose had suggested.

“If China, Japan and Turkey can introduce Roman Script”, said Subhash Chandra Bose, “Why not India? Chinese, Japanese and Turkish languages are far more difficult than Hindi.”