Every year, September 14 is recognised as Hindi Diwas in India. One of the reasons we observe this day is to stop the growing trend. English is preferred in favour of Hindi throughout the country. Hindi written in Devanagari was chosen as the official language of the country. India became a republic on September 14, 1949. Seth Govindadas, Maithili Sharan Gupta, Hazari Prasad Dwivedi, and Kaka Kalelkar all had a big impact on Hindi’s official status. language. The first Hindi Day was celebrated in 1953. After Hindi, English is the second official language (Article 343 of the Constitution). Hindi is a second language on the ninth schedule. Article 351 addresses the “Directive for the development of the Hindi language.” Hindi is not a classical language. In the several chapters of the report it delivered to the President, the Committee of Parliament on Official Language (CPOL) made suggestions for the promotion of Hindi in the nation’s educational system. The Committee recommended the implementation of the three-language formula, teaching Hindi to central government employees, teaching Hindi through correspondence courses, broadcasting of Hindi lessons by Door darshan/All India Radio, among other things, in the third section of the report it submitted to the President in February 1989. On the basis of these proposals, the President has also issued directives. Similar recommendations were made in the fifth section of the report that the Committee submitted addressing the study of law in Hindi. This proposition calls for the establishment of Hindi-medium law programmes at the undergraduate and graduate levels in all national universities as well as other legal institutions.
It was requested that the Department of Education take the required action in this regard. The Department of Official Language issued the necessary directives in May 1992, stating that all types of training, whether of short or long duration, should be imparted through Hindi medium, so that following training through Hindi medium. This was in accordance with the recommendation in the third part of the Committee’s Report. Hindi is currently only taught as a required subject up till the eighth grade in state government schools and Kendriya Vidyalayas funded by the central government. The Central Government’s employees are occasionally relocated and assigned in various locations across the nation. Hindi should be taught in all public schools under a clear-cut, successful framework.
Kendriya Vidyalayas, which were specifically created to offer top-notch education to the children of Central Government employees. The Ministry of Human Resource and Development needs to make a move in this direction. Considering that the Honourable Minister of Human Resources and Kendriya Vidyalayas would eventually be built in each district of the nation, according to recent development. If schools approved by the Central Board of Examination exist in addition to Kendriya Vidyalayas,
We will undoubtedly have a generation that will be entirely capable of carrying out their 100 percent official work in Hindi once they join the Secondary Education (CBSE), all private schools recognised by the Government, and all the schools sponsored by various state governments their individual services. Hindi is now offered as an elective subject beginning in ninth grade at Kendriya Vidyalayas. Similar circumstances are present in practically every school in the nation. Therefore, the Committee recommends that Hindi be taught up till the tenth grade in all schools receiving funding from the Central Government and in CBSE-approved institutions.
St. Xaviers Bangalore suggests the teaching of Hindi language as an opportunity to know our country better. The language includes the culture and heritage of our land. A minimum level of Hindi is required for every competitive level examination. Our institution celebrates the Hindi Diwas with utmost sincerity and love towards the language.