India

“Uncivilised” vs “Arrogant”: Centre, Tamil Nadu’s ‘Hindi Imposition’ Battle

by aweeincm1

The Tamil Nadu vs centre ‘language war‘ – over the National Education Policy and its three-language formula, which the southern state views as ‘imposition of Hindi’ – exploded in Parliament Monday afternoon with Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan criticising the latter’s ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam for being “uncivilised” and “ruining the future of students (from the state)”.

Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin delivered a swift and feisty response; in a statement posted on X he accused Mr Pradhan of arrogance and told him to “mind his words”.

“They (the DMK) are being dishonest. They are not committed to Tamil Nadu students. They are ruining the future of Tamil Nadu students. Their only job is to raise language barriers. They are doing politics… mischief. They are undemocratic,” Mr Pradhan raged in the Lok Sabha.

This followed his earlier claim – that Tamil Nadu had, in fact, agreed to fully implement the new education policy, including its three-language formula, only to backtrack later, allegedly in hopes of using the emotionally charged issue to get votes in next year’s Assembly election.

He also claimed “internal bickering” in the DMK – which has dominated recent elections in the state, including the 2021 Assembly and 2024 Lok Sabha polls – had led to this stand-off.

The minister’s unseemly “uncivilised” jab drew a biting response from Mr Stalin, who said Mr Pradhan “thinks of himself as a king”. “You are insulting the people of Tamil Nadu. Does the Honorable Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, accept this?” Mr Stalin asked, tagging the PM and continuing, “We have not come forward to implement your plan (the three-language formula) … and no one can force us…”

The Tamil Nadu Chief Minister then demanded a definitive answer from Mr Modi on claims by Mr Pradhan last month – that the centre will withhold funds for the state’s education sector unless it complies with the three-language policy. Mr Stalin had branded this warning as “blackmail”.

“Just answer whether it is possible to release funds belonging to Tamil Nadu students and the taxes collected from us!” he thundered in his post, warning the BJP, as his deputy, Udhayanidhi Stalin had last month, the state had “rejected the National Education Policy entirely”.

It wasn’t just Mr Pradhan and Mr Stalin firing at each other; ex-Tamil Nadu Governor and BJP leader Tamilisai Soundarajan accused the DMK of denying students from poorer sections the right to study a third language. “When children from affluent families (can) study three languages, why is the same opportunity being denied to poor children… ” she asked.

Meanwhile, from across the aisle, the DMK’s Dayanidhi Maran and K Kanimozhi hit out at the narrative the party had reneged on a promise to fully implement the new education policy.

“… DMK never agreed to NEP or three-language policy… all we said is our students need not learn three languages while students from the north learn only one. We are not against Hindi… if students want to learn… they are free to do so but it should not be compulsory…” Mr Maran said.

The row over ‘Hindi imposition’ – a sensitive topic in the south, and particularly in Tamil Nadu, where violent ‘anti-Hindi’ riots broke out in the 1960s and which has always been opposed to the language being foisted on it – has re-erupted with the BJP pushing its new education policy.

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