25/08/2021
Yes, Hindi is an official language, but, there are 22 other offcial languages and they share equal status. So, there are 23 official languages in India including English and 22 regional languages where English is exempted. Get this done with your illiterate minds. India is a secular nation and
it gives it's states the liberty and powers to chose their own official language(s) through legislation. Don't spoil that secularism by claimingg Hindi to be the national language.
Many Indians think language decides a person's knowledge and speaking english would make them look intelligent and this is the exact sanctity or holiness that is painted on Hindi lately. Already, many regions near the Hindi speaking population are trying to swap their mother tongue with Hindi thinking that it's a privilege to speak Hindi. This is going to make your language disappear thereby destroying the literature and ancient research works in that language.
This is cultural genocide and there are chances that we lose the essential details of the human race through the
process. If communication is the only reason for you to impose Hindi on us, why not English which most of us are
already comfortable with? Why do you stress a foreign language on us destroying our language. If you feel
otherwise, only the languages i
disappeared over years whereas the languages here in South are standing tall in solidarity. Can you explain? When a person from the north is trying to converse with the South
Indians, most of us try to speak a few words in their language to comfort them, but, when a person from south
goes to North and does the same, she's being put to shame and is reciprocated with hatred. Recently, Uddhav Thackeray, CM of Maharashtra was criticised for speaking in Marathi instead of Hindi. A state's chief getting mocked for speaking the state's official as well as regional language is atrocious. Why so much arrogance? This is equally
disastrous like a religious or casteist violence. Don't lose yourself trying to mess with the features that are native to a region.
Read Continuation in the first comment.