Sunday, April 03, 2005

OF Hindi and Tamil?

RK Narayan once said, “ You may give a man an excellent cookery book, but it will not help if the man has not learnt how to cook.”

Mr. Narayan was not referring to culinary matters. Rather, he was touching upon a rather queer fact: the knowledge (read lack of) of spoken Hindi in Tamil Nadu. He quoted the above when replying to a rather staunch supporter of Hindi who was complaining that the 8:00 pm DD news was given only in Tamil and not in Hindi (this was before the days of FTV). The fact is clear: Tamil Nadu is dismal when it comes to speaking Hindi.

During the first few days of college I remember a lot of “northies” in my class complaining that the moment they stepped out of the railway platform, it was as if they were in a whole new world (linguistically). Right from the auto-rickshaw driver to the traffic policeman, no one spoke Hindi! To make the trip from the station to the campus was an ordeal for many, as they had use signs and contoured faces to describe their destination. Some of the places had nearly unpronounceable names and to top it all, the road signs were all written in Tamil (barring the few English ones that have been put up recently)! It also doesn’t help if one doesn’t know the Tamil numeric system; a street-smart auto-rickshaw driver might actually con an innocent customer into paying double the normal rate.

Without pointing to people or being specific, I would like to put forth two rather contrasting views on the topic.

Almost every politically motivated party in Tamil Nadu seems to be discouraging the use of Hindi in common parlance. Their argument is that Hindi is not their “native” language to begin with. Tamil on the other hand is classical, beyond comparison and even without peer. Why should one impose an alien language onto an alien culture? Also, they say, Tamil “fundamentals” are so ingrained into the psyche of the common man that it would be hard to change. Recently, these views have taken up concrete footing, what with the state government contemplating introducing compulsory Tamil education at the primary level and completely ignoring Hindi.

Hindi speaking “junta”, or atleast those in power believe that it is morally wrong not to speak Hindi in a state. Their view almost reaches dictatorial terms, as they believe that their “soft language” is THE ONLY WAY of dealing.

Are these arguments for real? In my humble opinion…no. I have no right to say which language is better than the other or for that matter whether any other language is better, since I am not proficient in any of them. But I feel that we are all Indians first and whatever language group next. In order for us to develop as a nation we should share a common bond, a feeling of one-ness. For that, it would be necessary for us to have some lingua franca to enable, say, a farmer from Tamil Nadu to be able to talk to a farmer from Haryana or Assam. Right now, Hindi is the best bet for that and so it would be paramount to give them that ability. There was a time as Mr. Narayan puts it, when every family had atleast one or two members who took up serious study of Hindi. All that is gone, though it shouldn’t be.

If Tamil is the cake, Hindi should be the icing. Everyone in Tamil Nadu, should have a sound knowledge of our cultural heritage and traditions but at the same time be able to speak Hindi to convey those very same ideals to others. Let Tamil be compulsory in schools, but let Hindi also be taught, not in an academic, mark-oriented way but in one that would permit exchange of views, even ideas! We should use this tool to forge new bonds and let the ideals of nationalism surge through us. After all, it is only then that every “Tam”, “Dig” and “Be- hari” can prosper.

>>Berhael

12 comments:

prasan said...

How true! Very well written article.You should have probably included some funny anecdotes.
Also,many tamilians(sorry, no names!)think they know hindi and let loose a whole lot of twaddle!

Anonymous said...

hi
totally disagree! its not necessary for everyone to learn every language!
today the link language is english (r.k.narayan commented in english,so are u and so am i!)
did you ever consider the fact that people find it really difficult to learn a new language?
the actual problem is much more basic.
and its not really necessary to thrust a language onto ppl...
the problem is not only here but also prevailent in karnataka,kerala and also in interior parts of eastern india(the regional language is spoken there-not hindi)
but i agree with one thing-the auto fellows here are really cunning!

Karthik Rao Cavale said...

First of all I must say, I agree with the anonymous commenter bfore me. But let me put things in a different angle.

Again I must tell u that 10th wing junta in Godav have had this debate many times over, so all the questions that can be raised have been raised, and replies to them found.

Even if Hindi is to be only a 3rd language, why not replace it with Telugu, Dig, or Mallu? Surely more digs, gults come to chennai than northies, and they too dont know tam.

And if our Hindi chap cant learn English why should the tam guy learn hindi which will be of lesser use than hindi.

And certainly in many places, hindi is encroaching upon the rightful space of regional languages, one example being bombay.

Karthik Rao Cavale said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Berhael said...

well, my basic point was..don't be vehement towards ONLY hindi or tamil, or telugu (please refrain from using "gults", no offense). english will do. be open minded..and see everyone as an indian, speak watever you want. its a lot more simpler. thanks

vineet punnoose said...

yeah thats what we are saying..language is just a tool y should u be so passionate abt it...for a person if he learns english that will be more useful in communicating with people than hindi...

Anonymous said...

If a Tamil want to share his views with north indians, yes ofcourse he should learn Hindi, in the same way if a north indian wants to share his views with Tamils he must learn Tamil.

There should be reciprocation ineither side not only in one side.

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Anonymous said...

Tamil ppl always says that there is no need of learning hindi ...reason:-> tamil is their native language and they will learn tamil first then will learn english and no need to learn hindi..
Now i am just think all other states are bullshit states u know why beacuse they also have their own state language like punjabi, gujrati, marathi, himachali, kasmiri, garhwali, kumaoni, bangali..telgu, kannad, malyalam, udiya...etc...but still they learn hindi and english..they should stop learning hindi which 70% of indians can speak..just learn ur state language and english..
tamil ppl will be happy now..then after couple of years all state should be independent country..tamil ppl want it asap...they are british follower...divide and rule

JSN said...

Why is special preference given to Hindi in CBSE schools?

Hindi syllabus + Sanskrit have far less syllabus than Tamil II language and this so called "Lower Hindi". It is high time this compulsory "Lower Hindi" followed in CBSE schools like La Chatelaine, Bhavan's Rajaji Vidyashram, KVIIT, Kendriya Vidyalaya, DAV, Sainik, Navodaya etc are scrapped. There is undue over load of portions in "Lower Hindi" compared to III Sanskrit taken by Hindi II language takers. In fact portions of Lower Hindi (III Hindi) is more than II Hindi.

Which means it is a punishment to take Tamil in Tamilnadu due to unfair Hindi imposition in form of Lower Hindi with unduely large syllabus.

THis is again partiality for Hindians by CBSE system.

Also CBSE schools are violating Tamil Nadu Tamil Learning Act by making Tamil a boycottable subject for those taking Hindi.

If you seeing top ranks taken by Hindi core subject takers, it is nothing but a fraud done by CBSE to punish people taking Tamil.