International Mother Language Day: Make Sindhi a national language to preserve it, demand nationalists

Writer Yousuf Sindhi suggests protests outside schools that do not teach Sindhi.


Our Correspondent February 21, 2014
Nationalists demand that Sindhi language be given the status of a national language on the occasion of International Mother Language Day. PHOTO: IRFAN ALI/EXPRESS

HYDERABAD: Sindhi writers and poets revived their old demand for the recognition of Sindhi as one of the national languages of Pakistan on International Mother Language Day on Friday.

“The use of Sindhi language should be enforced in the government offices, courts and educational institutions,” demanded Dr Mushtaq Phul of the Sindhi Adabi Sangat (literary fraternity), which organised a rally in Hyderabad.

The speakers drew attention to how the Indian government has preserved its languages by making them state languages. “The Sindh Assembly has already passed a law to use Sindhi as the official language and ensure its compulsory learning right from the school level.”


Members of the Pakistan Siraiki Party rally on International Mother Language Day.

Sindh Taraqi Pasand vice chairperson Dr Rajab Memon suggested that district-level committees should be formed to monitor the teaching of Sindhi language in schools.

Writer Yousuf Sindhi suggested that protests should be held outside schools that do not teach Sindhi.

Sindh Language Authority chairperson Dr Fehmida Hussain, who was speaking at a separate lecture, warned of the potential threat to historic South Asian languages. She stated a research study of the Lahore School of Economics, which said that 33 out of the 700 South Asian languages may vanish in the next few decades. “Although Sindhi language doesn’t face such a threat at this point in time, there is a need to accord our language the recognition it deserves,” she said. The event, titled ‘Globalisation of cultures and importance of mother tongues’, was organised by the non-profit Sindh Agriculture Forestry Workers Coordination Organisation.

Dr Hussain also pointed out the threat of extinction to some Sindhi dialects and called for measures for their preservation. She said that her organisation is recording the dialects, fables, stories and folk literature from sughars (folks) of Sindh. “The promotion of multilingualism is the only way forward to protect all our indigenous languages and dialects,” she contended. “This can be done by recognising Sindhi, Punjabi, Balochi and Pashto as national languages.”

Published in The Express Tribune, February 22nd, 2014.

COMMENTS (11)

Bilal Akber | 9 years ago | Reply

@ovais what a big lie, Im a Karachite myself and there are alot of Sindhis in Karachi. District Malir and District South along with Gulshan and keamari towns have alot of Sindhis. Total there are around 3-4 million Sindhis in Karachi and 50% Hyderabadis are Sindhis . Demographics are Changing :) So, its the right of Sindhi's to make a lawful demand for their language . Why was the language of only 7% imposed on the rest of 93% of Pakistan ?

Realist | 10 years ago | Reply

@Progressive Sindhi: Marvelously put. (Y) thumbs uP.

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