LANGUAGE
The Indian subcontinent consists of a number of separate
linguistic communities each of which share a common language and
culture. The people of India speak many languages and dialects which
are mostly varieties of about 18 principal languages and 3000 dialects.
India is as close as the world comes to Babel. There's no 'Indian'
language per se, which is partly why English is still widely spoken
almost half a century after the British left India. Eighteen languages
are officially recognised by the constitution, but over 3000 minor
languages and dialects were listed in the 2001 census. Language
is a heavily politicised issue, not least because many state boundaries
have been drawn on linguistic lines. Major efforts have been made
to promote Hindi as the national language and to gradually phase
out English. A stumbling block to this plan is that while Hindi
is the predominant language in the north, it bears little relation
to the Dravidian languages of the south. In the south, very few
people speak Hindi. The Indian upper class clings to English as
the shared language of the educated elite, championing it as both
a badge of their status and as a passport to the world of international
business. In truth, only about 3% of Indians have a firm grasp of
the language.
Some Indian languages have a long literary history--Sanskrit literature
is more than 5,000 years old and Tamil 3,000. India also has some
languages that do not have written forms. There are 18 officially
recognized languages in India (Konkani, Manipuri and Nepali were
added in 1992) and each has produced a literature of great vitality
and richness.
Though distinctive in parts, all stand for a homogeneous culture
that is the essence of the great Indian literature. This is an evolution
in a land of myriad dialects. The number of people speaking each
language varies greatly. For example, Hindi has more than 250 million
speakers, but relatively few people speak Andamanese.
Although some of the languages are called "tribal" or
"aboriginal", their populations may be larger than those
that speak some European languages. For example, Bhili and Santali,
both tribal languages, each have more than 4 million speakers. Gondi
is spoken by nearly 2 million people. India's schools teach 58 different
languages. The nation has newspapers in 87 languages, radio programmes
in 71, and films in 15.
The Indian languages belong to four language families: Indo-European,
Dravidian, Mon-Khmer, and Sino-Tibetan. Indo-European and Dravidian
languages are used by a large majority of India's population. The
language families divide roughly into geographic groups. Languages
of the Indo-European group are spoken mainly in northern and central
regions.
The languages of southern India are mainly of the Dravidian group.
Some ethnic groups in Assam and other parts of eastern India speak
languages of the Mon-Khmer group. People in the northern Himalayan
region and near the Burmese border speak Sino-Tibetan languages.
Speakers of 54 different languages of the Indo-European family make
up about three-quarters of India's population. Twenty Dravidian
languages are spoken by nearly a quarter of the people. Speakers
of 20 Mon-Khmer languages and 98 Sino-Tibetan languages together
make up about 2 per cent of the population.
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