Few know that in Pakistan, over 65 different languages are spoken along with the so-called ‘provincial languages’— Punjabi, Pashto, Sindhi and Balochi.
The policy of enforcing a single language across the entire geography of the state through educational and security policies in order to achieve an imagined national cohesion is like slipping in a Trojan Horse which strikes down the very objectives for which it was built. While on the other hand, this ‘one language, one religion, one nation’ policy establishes the hegemony of a single, ‘alien’ language and consequently that of an alien culture because language is the most effective driver of culture.
One might assume that the speakers of regional languages do not want their languages to be used in education or in the media. But one shouldn’t jump to conclusions. The fact that some students don’t want to learn the smaller languages is the direct outcome of policies the state has been holding dear since decades.
When a particular language is given advantage over others via select education reforms, media and governance, the speakers of the less developed languages tend to look down upon their own languages and cultures and regard them as the barriers to their ‘development’. Both English and Urdu are regarded as the languages of development — or rather, portrayed to be so. Those who speak good English are regarded to be better educated than those who do not.
Today, if someone speaks either English or Urdu in his/her own accent, he is regarded as someone less educated. The Pashto speakers, who cannot pronounce certain words of Urdu in a correct way, are always laughed at. Today, almost all the comic text messages circulated via mobile phones are related to Pathans and Sikhs. This is the result of a particular kind of education we have been experiencing in Pakistan, which is simply engendering racism and antagonism in our minds.
In order to cope with the hegemony of a single language, educational polices need to be revised and adapted to embrace linguistic diversity.
The Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution is a right step towards achieving this goal. In the wake of the devolution of education to the provinces, the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa government adopted Pashto as medium of instruction for primary level education. Moreover, the provincial authorities resolved to incorporate four other languages (Hindko, Khowar, Seriaki and Indus Kohistani) to be gradually incorporated in the primary school syllabus. Hopefully, remaining languages in the province will also be made a part of the school curriculum.
In addition to these policies, extensive research is needed for the standardisation of the orthographies of these languages. Many of the hindrances in the way of reading and writing a language are due to the fact that there are no widely-recognised rules for writing or spelling. Take the example of Pashto: with its multiple forms in Pakistan and Afghanistan, Pashto enjoys almost no universality. For a single phoneme there are different symbols which make it difficult for the reader to articulate. Varieties, however, are no threat to a language — rather, they enrich it; but Pashto today needs a central standard form similar to that of English. The centre for this standard can either be Peshawar or Kabul.
Similarly, community researchers in ‘minority languages’ need to sit together and devise orthographies for their languages. For instance, in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa and Gilgit-Baltistan, all the languages other than Hindko and Brushaski are from the Dardic of the Indo-Aryan branch of languages. Most of the sounds in these languages are identical; but so far, community researchers don’t realise this and have been writing the same sounds with different letters.
Language activists in these communities may know that they, more or less, share the same ancestor and the same culture. A standardisation in the orthographies with more commonalities not only will make their job easier but also integrate the speakers and enhance their political and social powers.
Urdu is imposed at the cost of others as it has always been deemed a tool to unnaturally homogenise the diverse cultural landscape of Pakistan.
A resolution by the National Assembly Standing Committee for Information, Broadcasting and National Heritage to have a commission on language issues in Pakistan is a forward step but it is in no way a solution to meeting the needs of preserving and promoting linguistic diversity.
Instead of a commission, the government needs to declare all the languages spoken in Pakistan as national languages and set up an authority to carry research on these languages and cultures.
Published in The Express Tribune, April 30th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (12)
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@shahid: It is one thing not to have any knowledge of the subject but another to write a load of crap. The language of the people is their identity, culture and traditions. Pakistan is not a Nation but a country of several Nations, each with unique identity, language and culture; which can only take the form of a Nation if it establishes a federal republic made up of several regions, with a central Government having only necessary functions including that of defence and foreign affairs. The language spoken by the people is usualy the official language of the State as well in most European countries. From Belgium and switzerland who have several official languages to UK and France and Spain who have a lingua franca of english, french or Spanish as their State language, one will also notice the separatist movements in these countries as well. The scots and the corsicans and the Acquitans or catalans, who have all been strggling to maintain their identity.
Rex Minor
@Ali Tanoli: Urdu / Hindi was pushed on present people of Pakistan. Before the British came, there were only local languages and Persian. Urdu / Hindi or the original Hindustani comes from India and it is embarrassing for Pakistanis to be associated with this language when we travel to Middle East.
Even before the 18 amendment, Pashto was the language of instruction in NWFP, now Kpk.
@shahid: I don't know where you get this information from but it is largely incorrect. India did not make Hindi the national language - we have no national or 'common' language. Hindi, along with English, is one of the 'official' languages, i.e merely a medium of discourse in a country of unbelievable diversity (Pakistan being much smaller naturally has less diversity). Hindi and Urdu evolved at the same time as other languages of the Gangetic plain like Awadhi, Banarasi, Bhojpuri, Maithili etc. Urdu is the dialect called Khariboli that was spoken in Western UP, and given the disproportionate influence that Delhi has on Indian politics since well nigh 1000 years and more, this particular dialect became a lingua franca of sorts in the North. Hindi and Urdu are the same language, you just replace Sanskrit-based words with their Persian/ Arabic -origin equivalent, and hey presto! you have a new language. The irony is most telling - you wanted a separate country and a different identity, but the one factor that keeps you bound to India more than anything else, is the common language that was one of the principal planks for muslim separatism in pre-independence India.
"In fact, the cultural and linguistic diversity of Pakistan has never been a favourite subject in the channels of national discourse either in the media, education institutes or the academia"
Well take a step back... Ask for religious diversity (most contentious) and everything else will follow... You cannot have a country founded on religious exclusivity and then seek diversity within...
Urdu is and will be our national and one day official language of this country we love urdu and its a great lang and lang of indo pak muslim.
I am all for Urdu. Among other reasons , it also shares a lot of words with its cousin Hindi.
All the regional languages in Pakistan are written in the Arabic script, so is Urdu. Urdu shares a huge vocabulary with the local languages, so it is the best common language in Pakistan. However, the regional language can be adopted as medium of education at primary level. The Author has failed to realize that it is actually English which is responsible for the decay of all the local languages, including Urdu.
Sindhis love their language and literature and have struggled a lot for giving Sindhi and other languages of Pakistan, the status of national languages, but unfortunately, they are not supported by people from other provinces, and are rather considered as having prejudice against other languages of Pakistan. In fact, this is not the case. Sindhi language and literature enjoyed greater freedom during the British Rule, whereby Sindhi was an official language of the State of Sindh, but after the creation of Pakista, Sindhi suffered a lot and was relegated to a secondary position in its own province. With the influx of millions of non-Sindhi speakers, the original crux of the language is in danger, and the non-native people are not made duty bound to learn Sindhi language, which has its first right on the people of Sindh. Sindhis are not against the imposition of foreign languages e.g. English and Urdu, but only want that other regional languages of Pakistan, such as the most advanced language Sindhi, Punjabi, Pushto and Balochi may be given the status of National Languages of Pakistan and these languages may be introduced from primary to university level education in parallel with English and Urdu.
get rid of english...become free...like china, russia, france, germany...keep adding. ...ultimate slavery is to become modern to please OTHERS. do you not know people in the west laugh and make fun of us....whenwe speak english to IMPRESS THEM. learn all or as many languages but for YOUR OWN sake and not to become a clone of your former masters.
An excellent, much needed article. It's time to reown our mother tongues, the imposition of Urdu has been one of the worst things that has happened to Pakistan from a cultural point of view, it has immensly impoverished us. Everyone should speak its own mother tongue (Pashto, Urdu, Punjabi, Balochi etc) and English. Let's make English not Urdu the language that connects people from different linguistic backgrounds (the benefits are quite obvious).
Urdu/Hindi have not descended on us from the heavens. It has evolved from the native languages spoken in northern India from the west all the way to the west. Any one who has done any serious research will tell you how languages gradually change as one moves from one geographical area to the next. Urdu/Hindi is the result of centuries of evolution and hence shares a huge amount in its grammatical structures and vocabulary. It also has absorbed the vocabulary and structures from other languages of the middle east and central Asia during this evolution. As things stand today Urdu/Hindi is the most suitable language to provide a common language for our Pakistan/India. In India they made this decision and Hindi has been their common language since Indian independence. It is only in Pakistan where the mental slavery to the British has been so endemic that these children of Macaulay have never allowed Urdu to become the official language of Pakistan. No nation state in the world today is 100% single language nation and yet there is a language that is used to conduct the business of the state. Pick any place in Europe, Middle East or the Far East. It is only the children of Macaulay in Pakistan who have not freed themselves from the language of their colonial masters and hence they will not let any opportunity go by the keep English as the dominant language of discourse in Pakistan.
How many other nations in the world follow this silly policy? Helping improve the regional languages alive and progress is great and should be done, but should it happen at the cost of maintaining a real ALIEN language "English" imposed on us because of a small minority who would much rather stay mental and intellectual slaves. Why are Germans, Russians, Turks, Italians, French, Dutch, Spaniards, Chinese, Japanese, Koreans not adopting English as their main language? Learning English is fine and needed, but should it be our national language and used as the primary means of education in Pakistan? NO<