Make Sanskrit India\'s official language: NCST chairman

Make Sanskrit India's official language: NCST chairman

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Amid a controversy over being part of a three-language formula, Chairman Kumar Sai Thursday demanded that the government make the official language, as many Indian languages originate from it.

"It's good that you want to learn English. But you should also learn and respect your own language which is is a complete language, while English lacks logic," he said.

Sai said would have done better had Sanskrit been made its official language.

"Sanskrit is close to Tamil, Kannada, Telugu, Malyalam and even Therefore, it should be made compulsory for everyone. Also, people in other regions won't oppose it," he claimed.

The under the draft National Education Policy (NEP), which has since been modified, had recommended Hindi teaching in all government schools.

After facing an intense backlash from and protests in several other states, the Centre dropped the contentious provision of compulsory teaching of Hindi in the revised draft education policy.

Sai also said he doesn't support the Centre's Citizenship Amendment Bill which proposes to give citizenship to Hindus, Sikhs, Christians, Buddhists, Jains and Parsis from Muslim-majority Bangladesh, and

"Already a lot of migrants have entered the Northeast. The Bill will jeopardize the interests of our own people," he said.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, June 06 2019. 17:25 IST