The national language debate is back in Tamil Nadu, and this time, it has stirred up a nation-wide Twitter storm. The hashtag #StopHindiChauvinism has been trending on social media as several Tamilians take to Twitter to vent their anger over the perceived imposition of Hindi on the state by the central government.
At the centre of this debate are little white and yellow milestones that dot the national highways of Tamil Nadu. Last week, English signs were being erased from these milestones by the National Highways Authority of India and replaced with Hindi signs instead, reported The New Indian Express. Milestones on NH 75, which connects cities in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu, now reportedly have signs only in Kannada, Tamil and Hindi. Similarly, NH 77 which connects Krishnagiri district in Tamil Nadu with Pondicherry has been reported to have place names written only in Tamil and Hindi.
This weeding out of English has raised concerns over the inconvenience that might be caused to travellers, truckers and medical tourists from other states. Moreover, it is regarded as a violation of the three-language road signage policy - which must include the regional language, Hindi and English.
#StopHindiChauvinism This is totally unethical! Why should HINDI occupies here in milestone :( pic.twitter.com/Arb6CuBZrk
— Manoj Daran (@Manojdaran) April 3, 2017
@ShekharMohanty4 @HinduRajyam Whose money is it anyway?? Do we pay tax for this?? #StopHindiChauvinism pic.twitter.com/YRVVEkZrK6
— Indian always (@bhavana503) April 4, 2017
@itisdeepakdubey @Neyandar S. British imposed English but now Hindi is being imposed on us. pic.twitter.com/6IfY5dlD4D
— Praveen Kumar (@Praveenkumar91) April 4, 2017
Dear Indian government if u trying to impose Hindi on us this wat happen #StopHindiChauvinism 😂 pic.twitter.com/Qf7WGa0IX6
— pirammarajan (@pirammarajan) April 3, 2017
But the entry of Hindi into these milestones, in the place of English, seems to have touched a raw nerve among the people of Tamil Nadu. Tamilians have historically strongly opposed the imposition of Hindi on the state. In 1965, when Hindi was to be made the sole official language of the country, anti-Hindi agitations peaked in the state resulting in two months of violence, arson and looting spread across the state.
Following media reports on the milestones, leaders of Tamil Nadu political parties like Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam and Pattali Makkal Katchi have issued warnings of large-scale protests if the centre continued to push for Hindi at the expense of other languages.
“This shows bringing Hindi hegemony through the backdoor in Tamil Nadu,” said MK Stalin, DMK’s working president, in a statement to the press.
Meanwhile, social media users argue that while Hindi may be an official language, it is not the national language of the country and cannot be forced on non-Hindi states.
#StopHindiChauvinism pic.twitter.com/Z2USjbe254
— Ramsey (@ramkiramasamy) April 4, 2017
For me "NO USE OF HINDI" Why should i learn? English useful for Job & to go abroad. If i want, I learn any IND language #StopHindiChauvinism
— V.Tamizhan (@vnvn_2005) April 4, 2017
Glad we had leaders like Annadurai #StopHindiChauvinism pic.twitter.com/5mX283SgB9
— புலி Arαşαη (@PuliArason) April 3, 2017
British r renowned fr colonisation
— ಬೀದಿ ನಾಟಕ (@mareguLi) April 4, 2017
Let Hindi belt admit that they're also colonising non Hindi regions of India, then. #StopHindiChauvinism https://t.co/JFP3M3xYwh
Dear Hindi Speakers, our fight is against hindi imposition not against the language. Get it right. Pls join us. #StopHindiChauvinism
— Jayateerth Nadagouda (@jayateerthbn) April 3, 2017
Several social media users from other states across the country have voiced their protest against the move to replace English with Hindi on highway milestones. Lashing out against Twitter users who asked “Why can’t you learn Hindi?”, people from Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and even Bihar joined in the clamour against the imposition of Hindi.
If Karnataka should have a multilingual policy, it should b along the lines of Kannada+Tulu+Kodava+Konkani and English. #StopHindiChauvinism
— Liberator Furiosa (@MissFurioso) April 3, 2017
Dear Southies kudos to you for stopping the Hindi onslaught. Love from - A Bihari who lost his language i.e. Bhojpuri. #StopHindiChauvinism
— Rogue Academic (@rogueacademic88) April 3, 2017
#StopHindiChauvinism learnt hindi from lkg.Travelled 3000 kms on bike from vizag to sikkim.English is my saviour not hindi🙏
— Karthik (@drkarthik_n) April 3, 2017
Telugu will be the first language to get extinct... Let's join hands with Tamizhs and Kannadigas and #StopHindiChauvinism
— OnlyTFI™|SPYder (@OnlyTFI) April 3, 2017
Yes this is the power of kannadigas
— purvi raj arasu (@purviraju1) April 4, 2017
Dont test our patience
This is karnataka not hindia#StopHindiChauvinism pic.twitter.com/Q3EKwiTXIi