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by FraaJad 3607 days ago
Hindi is a local language. Those who can't write/read their own mother tongue are the product of the aforementioned linguistic apartheid where the city bred kids (I am one) attend a CBSE/ICSE curriculum that actively discourage non-Hindi/English languages.
2 comments

Linguistic apartheid is a pretty loaded term, they aren't teaching one's mother tongue, which, to me is like any other subject. You can still learn it elsewhere.

It may be discrimination but apartheid is an exaggeration.

> Those who can't write/read their own mother tongue are the product of the aforementioned linguistic apartheid

You have two options:

a. Teach them a language they can use almost anywhere on the planet. A language that documents most of the planets knowledge.

b. Teach them a language they can use in their geographical district and almost nowhere else.

The powers that they'd be better served by (a). You might think (b) would have been a better choice, but implying that (a) is akin to apartheid is ridiculous.

If I'm forced to use the word "apartheid" to label one of those, I'd point to (b). To teach the poor of india a language that handicaps them compared to humans of the planet who take path (a) is to limit their opportunities and keep them "in their place" in their little geographic corner of the world.

I can see this argument coming from someone who is privileged enough to move outside their ancestral domicile.

Most people, even those born in the richest country in the world, seldom move outside their state.

If I were to be treated like a second class citizen in my own place of birth because some languages give a small percentage of the population "world mobility", I would choose carefully.