New Delhi:
In a major decision, the Union Cabinet on Thursday approved giving the status of “classical language” to five more languages – Marathi, Bengali, Pali, Prakrit and Assamese. With this cabinet decision, the number of languages that have the status will nearly double from six to 11.
The languages that had the tag earlier were Tamil, Sanskrit, Telugu, Kannada, Malayalam and Odia. Tamil was granted the status in 2004 and the last language to get it was Odia, in 2014.
Demands for giving the status to some of these languages have been pending for a long time. This includes Marathi and then Maharashtra Chief Minister Prithviraj Chavan had set up a committee of language experts for this purpose in 2014. The panel had said that Marathi met all the criteria to be recognised as a classical language and this report was sent to the Centre.
Towards the end of last month, Congress General Secretary Jairam Ramesh had alleged that Prime Minister Narendra Modi was “ignoring” the demand for granting classical language status to Marathi.
“In the PM’s tenure, zero languages have been accorded classical language status. For ten years, he has done nothing on the well-argued case submitted by then Chief Minister of Maharashtra, Prithviraj Chavan, on 11th July, 2014, to declare Marathi as a classical Indian language,” Mr Ramesh had said.
The demand has now been fulfilled just ahead of the Maharashtra Assembly elections.
To be recognised as a classical language, the following criteria have to be met:
- High antiquity of the language’s early texts/recorded history over a period of 1,500-2,000 years.
- A body of ancient literature/texts, which is considered a heritage by generations of speakers.
- Knowledge texts, especially prose texts in addition to poetry, epigraphical and Inscriptional evidence.
- The classical languages and literature could be distinct from their current form or could be discontinuous with later forms of their offshoots.
Of the five new classical languages, while Assamese, Bengali and Marathi are widely spoken, Pali is spoken in some areas in India as well as Laos, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Thailand and Vietnam. It is the language of Buddha’s sermons and is also taught in some universities, including those in Allahabad and Patna.