Coffeehouse for desis
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

'Sanskrit must be janbhasha; it's not a language of Brahmins alone'

Go down

  'Sanskrit must be janbhasha; it's not a language of Brahmins alone' Empty 'Sanskrit must be janbhasha; it's not a language of Brahmins alone'

Post by Rishi Sat Oct 19, 2013 12:37 pm

Many feel that Indian languages are in a mess and what one witnesses is a mixture of English, Persian and Arabic in our regional languages. The question is, how do we purify Indian languages and remove the mix of various foreign languages? 


New Delhi-based Samskrita Bharati has decided to take upon itself the task of cleaning up Indian languages and to introduce Sanskrit as the mainstream language. Dinesh Kamath, the organisation’s all-Bharat organising secretary, speaks to Vicky Nanjappa about the cause.
“Our organisation aims at the revival of Sanskrit as a mass communication language (janbhasha) and facilitation of common man’s access to its vast knowledge treasure. We aim to engender cultural renaissance of Bharat by bringing Sanskrit back to the mainstream,” Kamath says.
“We also aim to attain social harmony and national integration by taking Sanskrit to the masses regardless of caste and creed, to promote study and research of original texts in lakhs of manuscripts that are yet unexplored,” he says.

“I said this at the beginning, that Sanskrit is not a language of the Brahmins. We have conducted 1.5 lakh camps in all and have taught 80 lakh people the language and over 70 per cent of them were non-Brahmins,” Kamath points out.
“The people have a misconception that Sanskrit is a very difficult language to speak. We use Sanskrit in the languages that we speak everyday. There are many words from Sanskrit in each of the languages that we speak. People think it is difficult, but then our job is to ensure that they learn the language and get over the mental block.
“While our first goal is to ensure that everyone learns how to speak the language, the next aim would be to teach them how to read and write. Once you learn how to speak the language it becomes easy to read and write,” Kamath notes.
“We have also introduced distance education courses through which people can learn the language. We have courses in various languages such as Kannada and Gujarati among other languages,” he says.
Kamath says there is a need to have Sanskrit as a learning subject right from primary education.
“Today it is all about learning the bread-giving language of English and there is more emphasis on the same. I am not even trying to say that English should not be part of education. In fact it is very important, but then it is equally important to learn Sanskrit as well. It is important that everyone, apart from learning the bread-giving language, should also learn the character-building language -- which is Sanskrit. Character-building education is the need of the hour and from nursery level on it should be made compulsory. Trust me, if everyone learns Sanskrit the culture among the people will change and it would only be a matter of time before crimes such as corruption and rape stop completely. This is the advantage of learning a character and culture-building language,” Kamath argues.

http://www.rediff.com/news/report/sanskrit-must-be-janbhasha-its-not-a-language-of-brahmins-alone/20131017.htm

Rishi

Posts : 5129
Join date : 2011-09-02

Back to top Go down

Back to top

- Similar topics

 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum