Key Points

Amit Shah emphasized how language was historically used to divide India but can now serve as a unifying force. He advocated for greater use of Indian languages in government exams and communications. Shah positioned Hindi as a supportive partner to regional languages rather than a competitor. The Home Minister stressed linguistic pride as key to shedding colonial mentalities and fostering national unity.

Key Points: Amit Shah Says Language Was Used to Divide India Now Unites It

  • Shah highlights past divisive use of language in India
  • Pushes for wider adoption of Indian languages in governance
  • Notes 95% of CAPF applicants now take exams in mother tongues
  • Calls Hindi a unifying force, not a rival to regional languages
3 min read

In the past, language was used as a means to divide India: Amit Shah

Amit Shah vows to strengthen Indian languages, citing their role in national unity and pride while promoting Hindi as a unifying force.

"Hindi is a friend of all Indian languages and together they can enhance our self-esteem - Amit Shah"

New Delhi, June 26

Union Home Minister Amit Shah stated on Thursday that language was previously used as a means to divide India, adding that the Centre would ensure that Indian languages become a powerful medium to unite the country.

"In the last few decades, language was used as a means to divide India. They could not break it, but efforts were made," Shah said while speaking at the Golden Jubilee celebration of the Official Language Department in Delhi.

"We will ensure that our languages become a powerful medium to unite India. For this, the Official Language Department will work. I believe that the foundation that is being laid under the leadership of Modi ji will create a great India in 2047, and on the way to creating a great India, we will develop our Indian languages, make them rich, increase their utility," he added.

Shah advocated for the greater use of Indian languages in governmental communications.

"Indian languages should be used as much as possible in government work, not only in the central government but also in the state government. For this, we will also contact the states, try to convince and persuade them," he said.

"JEE, NEET, CUET are now being taken in 13 languages. Earlier, you could only apply for the constable recruitment of CAPF in English or Hindi. We made it flexible and allowed the exam in 13 languages, and today I am happy to say that 95% of the candidates are giving the constable exam in their mother tongue. This tells how bright the future of Indian languages is in the coming days," he added.

He said that languages were not just a medium of communication, but the soul of the nation, further stating that it was necessary to keep languages alive and enrich them.

"As far as the country is concerned, language is not just a medium of communication; it is the soul of a nation. It is important to keep the languages alive and to enrich them. We should make all these efforts in the coming days for all Indian languages and especially for the official language," he said.

He also said that Hindi was a friend of all the Indian languages, further stating that Hindi and Indian languages together could play an important role in enhancing the nation's self-esteem.

"I believe from my heart that Hindi cannot be the enemy of any Indian language. Hindi is a friend of all Indian languages , and Hindi and Indian languages together can take our self-esteem program to its ultimate goal. There is no opposition to any language; there should not be opposition to any foreign language, but the insistence should be to glorify our language, there should be an insistence to speak our language, and there should be an insistence to think in our language," he stated.

"We should get rid of the mentality of slavery. And until a person takes pride in his language, does not express himself in his language, we cannot be free from the mentality of slavery..." he added.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
Finally some sense being spoken! For too long we've treated English as superior to our own languages. Why should a child in Tamil Nadu or Bengal feel disadvantaged for studying in their mother tongue? Exams in regional languages is a great step 🇮🇳
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Priya M.
While I appreciate promoting Indian languages, we must be careful not to impose Hindi on non-Hindi states. The beauty of India is in its diversity. Let's celebrate all languages equally - from Malayalam to Punjabi to Assamese.
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Arjun S.
Good initiative but implementation is key. Many government websites still don't have proper regional language options. First fix basic things like forms, helplines and public notices before making big claims.
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Sunita R.
As a teacher, I've seen how students perform better when taught in their mother tongue. But we need quality textbooks and trained teachers in all regional languages. Mere translation of English books won't work!
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Vikram J.
Hindi as a friend language is a good concept, but it should remain optional. In my state, we already have two languages to learn (regional + English). Adding Hindi as third language is too much burden on kids.
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Meena L.
Why only talk about languages? Our education system needs complete overhaul. First improve infrastructure and teaching quality, then we can debate about medium of instruction. Quality education matters more than language politics.
K
Kiran P.
Happy to see exams being conducted in regional languages! My cousin from village could finally clear CAPF exam because it was available in Telugu.

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