HomeNewsIndia'Hindi should be language of science, technology, justice and police': Amit Shah

'Hindi should be language of science, technology, justice and police': Amit Shah

Citing Gujarat as an example where both Hindi and Gujarati have flourished together, Shah said, “There is no conflict between Hindi and other Indian languages."

September 14, 2025 / 18:18 IST
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Insisting that children must learn in their native tongues, the Union minister remarked, “This is very important for the child's future, as many psychologists and educationists have confirmed that a child thinks in his mother tongue."
Insisting that children must learn in their native tongues, the Union minister remarked, “This is very important for the child's future, as many psychologists and educationists have confirmed that a child thinks in his mother tongue."

Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Sunday said that there was no clash between Hindi and other Indian languages, while underlining that Hindi must evolve beyond being merely a spoken medium and take its place in the fields of science, technology, justice, and policing. He was speaking at the inauguration of the 5th Akhil Bharatiya Rajbhasha Sammelan in Gandhinagar.

He said, “Hindi is not just a spoken language or a language of administration. Hindi should also be the language of science, technology, justice and police. When all these works are done in Indian languages, then the connection with the public is automatically established.” Shah added that Sanskrit has provided “the Ganga of knowledge, and Hindi has taken this knowledge to every home, and that knowledge has reached every person through our local languages.”

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Insisting that children must learn in their native tongues, the Union minister remarked, “This is very important for the child's future, as many psychologists and educationists have confirmed that a child thinks in his mother tongue. ... As soon as you impose a language other than the mother tongue on a child, 25 to 30 per cent of his mind's capacity will be spent in translating it.” He urged parents to always speak to their children in their mother tongue to preserve and make their languages “immortal.”

Citing Gujarat as an example where both Hindi and Gujarati have flourished together, Shah said, “There is no conflict between Hindi and other Indian languages. Learned men like Dayanand Saraswati, Mahatma Gandhi, KM Munshi, Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel, and many others accepted Hindi and promoted it. Gujarat, where Gujarati and Hindi have coexisted, is an excellent example of the development of both languages.” He further stressed that leaders like Gandhi and Saraswati had worked to promote Hindi in every state.