Author: Sandeep B
Publication: The Pioneer
Date: July 16, 2009
URL: http://www.dailypioneer.com/189389/Left-sees-red-over-Sanskrit.html
The arguments against the setting up of a
Sanskrit university in Karnataka are rooted in Marxist opposition to any effort
to preserve and revive India's cultural heritage
Ever since the Government announced the idea
of forming a Sanskrit university in Karnataka, the forces of hell have been
unleashed there. Normally, the two main Opposition parties who are always
opposed to each other on every issue in the State are now united in their
opposition to this proposal.
Sanskrit-bashing has been in vogue ever since
it was institutionalised under the aegis of the Nehruvian secularist state.
India's first brown sahib wrote about Sanskrit in flowery English, but failed
to grasp its fragrance. The result was the perpetuation of the missionary
system of education that severed hundreds of thousands of Indians from their
own roots. That kind of education apart from generating employment breeds
a curious sense of audacious entitlement bred by ignorance. And so, these
worthies call Sanskrit a "dead" language without learning it.
Ask them why, and you get a list of 'evidences'
stained with colonial and Marxist hues of Indian history. The 'dead' tag has
become political fodder for all opponents of Sanskrit. But fundamentally,
it stems from a vituperative hatred of Brahmins.
According to this theory, Sanskrit is supposedly
associated to Brahmins because it was the language of priests during the Vedic
times. This language was kept 'secret' and deliberately not taught to the
'oppressed classes'. The latest variation of this theory is that we need languages
that generate employment and Sanskrit doesn't qualify for this. By this logic,
most if not all Indian regional languages qualify as 'dead' languages.
Realistically, how many regional languages
are used in everyday business? Also, establishing a Sanskrit university is
supposed to somehow endanger Kannada's survival, another baseless argument
as we shall see.
The whole hoopla over renaming cities, roads,
and insistence on governmental transactions in a particular regional language
shows the desperation to retain the 'purity' of these languages in face of
the onslaught of English.
What these purity proponents don't realise
is that you cannot preserve Indian languages by severing their inextricable
link with Sanskrit. The vocabulary and grammar of most Indian languages are
derived from Sanskrit. From Telugu (which exhibits the maximum influence of
Sanskrit), Kannada, Malayalam, Hindi, Bengali, Marathi, Gujarati, and Oriya,
the root of every Indian language is Sanskrit. Cut off this root and every
language will need to find new words for common terms like marg, jan, mantri,
parishad, sabha, baarish, sri, guru, and so on. Also, is it a mere coincidence
that the script of most major Indian languages (barring all South Indian languages)
is a variant of Devanagari, the script of Sanskrit?
There's plentiful research that shows that
Sanskrit was not the language of just the Vedic priests. The most readily
available evidence is the Sanskrit idioms that have an echo in their regional
counterparts like galli ka kutta, road romeo, eve-teaser, and so on. The obvious
conclusion is that Sanskrit was a language of the lay man.
Sanskrit is what gives identity to the Indian
civilisation as we know it. From Valmiki to Kalidas, every major Sanskrit
literary work spoke of this identity in its own way. From the fourth canto
of Raghuvamsham, which describes the length and breadth of India to Meghadootam,
where the cloud-messenger describes in intense detail the beauty of the varying
diversity of India. Both these exalted works contain the subtext of the cultural
unity of the nation. And it is what our secularists want us to forget in their
hollow trumpeting of 'composite culture' (sic), which actually means denying
India its heritage to which Sanskrit contributes the lion's share.
The real reason for opposing the founding
of a Sanskrit university in Karnataka is starkly political than anything noble.
It reeks of the tired old rhetoric of Brahmins-are-the-root-of-all-evil-in-India.
Those opposing the move have exactly zero accomplishment in promoting the
cause of Kannada. Besides, the other overarching factor is that there's a
BJP Government in Karnataka.
We only need to look at all the other Sanskrit
universities in India to expose this woeful reasoning. How many of these Sanskrit
universities have threatened the language of the State in which they are situated?
Or is Kannada (or Telugu or Bengali) that fragile that it can't withstand
Sanskrit's influence? History shows that Indian regional languages were actually
enriched by close contact with Sanskrit and vice versa.
There's a reason why regional languages are
struggling for survival. The Nehruvian state's removal of Sanskrit from the
education system robbed these languages of their original richness. As a result,
the Hindi or Tamil we get to hear in the cities contain more English than
Hindi or Tamil.
The Karnataka Government's move is more than
welcome. If the Sanskrit university revives the defining language of India,
it will create a generation of self-aware and proud Indians who will (hopefully)
rediscover the genius of India and Sanskrit.