Rs 17 Crore Sanctioned to Preserve India's 11 Classical Languages in 2025-26

The government has sanctioned Rs 16.97 crore for the promotion and preservation of 11 classical languages in the 2025-26 fiscal year. Six languages, including Odia, Marathi, and Bangla, were newly recognized as classical in 2024. In a related initiative, the Gyan Bharatam project has digitized over 7.5 lakh manuscripts to preserve India's textual heritage. The project has received a substantial sanction of Rs 491.66 crore to operate until 2031 across five key verticals.

Key Points: Rs 16.97 Crore for 11 Classical Languages Preservation

  • Rs 16.97 crore for 11 classical languages
  • 6 languages recognized as classical in 2024
  • Over 7.5 lakh manuscripts digitized
  • Gyan Bharatam gets Rs 491.66 crore until 2031
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Rs 16.97 crore sanctioned for preservation of 11 classical languages in 2025-26: Shekhawat

Govt sanctions Rs 16.97 crore for 11 classical languages including Tamil, Sanskrit, and newly recognized Odia, Bangla. Gyan Bharatam digitizes manuscripts.

"Gyan Bharatam... aimed at unearthing, safeguarding and preserving India's vast manuscript heritage. - Gajendra Singh Shekhawat"

New Delhi, Feb 2

The government sanctioned a budget of Rs 16.97 crore in 2025-26 for promotion and preservation of 11 classical languages, Minister for Culture and Tourism Gajendra Singh Shekhawat said in a written reply in Lok Sabha on Monday.

He said the Sanskrit language is promoted through three Central Universities - Central Sanskrit University, New Delhi; Shri Lal Bahadur Shastri National Sanskrit University, New Delhi and National Sanskrit University, Tirupati.

The Minister identified the 11 classic languages as Tamil, Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam, Odia, Marathi, Assamese, Bangla, Pali and Prakrit.

Out of these, Odia, Marathi, Assamese, Bangla, Pali and Prakrit were recognised as classical languages in 2024.

While Bangla is the most widely spoken classical language with 9.72 crore people, Sanskrit is spoken by the least number of people at just 24,000.

The Minister said as per the Census of India 2011 (Office of the Registrar General and Census Commissioner, India), Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Telugu and Tamil are the top five most spoken languages in the country.

In another reply, the Minister said Gyan Bharatam, announced during Union Budget 2025-26, is a flagship initiative of the Ministry of Culture (MoC) aimed at unearthing, safeguarding and preserving India's vast manuscript heritage.

More than 7.5 lakh manuscripts have been digitised under Gyan Bharatam, out of which 1.29 lakh manuscripts are available on the Gyan Bharatam Portal, he said.

Aligned with the national vision of Viksit Bharat 2047, the initiative seeks to harmonise cultural preservation with human capital development, ensuring that India's ancient wisdom continues to inspire generations to come, he said.

To support the initiative, the Standing Finance Committee (SFC) has sanctioned Rs 491.66 crore for the period 2025-2031. This initiative focuses on five verticals - Survey and Cataloguing, Conservation and Capacity Building, Technology and Digitisation, Linguistics and Translation and Research, Publication, and Outreach, he said.

Gyan Bharatam has been mandated to establish a nationwide network of Cluster Centres (CCs) and Independent Centres (ICs) across the country.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
₹17 crore for 11 languages? That's roughly ₹1.5 crore per language. Seems like a very small amount when you consider the scale of the task. Hope it's used effectively and not just on paperwork.
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Aditya G
The digitisation of manuscripts under Gyan Bharatam is the real game-changer. Making 1.29 lakh manuscripts accessible online is fantastic for students and researchers across the country. Great step!
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Meera T
As a Tamilian, I'm proud Tamil was recognised as classical long ago. But I'm happier to see other Indian languages like Marathi and Assamese get their due. Unity in diversity is our strength.
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David E
Interesting data point: Sanskrit has only 24,000 speakers but gets three central universities. Shows the value placed on it as a root language. The focus should be on making these languages relevant to the youth.
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Sneha F
Good move, but implementation is key. Hope the Cluster Centres are actually set up in smaller towns and not just metros. The richness of Pali and Prakrit literature needs to reach everyone.

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