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>From an Indian Internet Forum, March 2003:

 

Rajasthan village switches to ancient language

**************************

 

Ganoda, Banswada, March 10: From the walls of Shambhunath Jha’s house, plastered

posters vie for attention. But the one that catches the eye is a conversation

chart that goes something like this: ‘‘Welcome. Please sit down. Would you like

some water? Nice to meet you. See you again. Goodbye.’’

 

The chart doesn’t just tell you how to make polite conversation. It also tells

you how to do it in Sanskrit. Jha’s little daughter rapidly replies to her

father’s questions, all in Sanskrit. Near the kitchen, the Jha household has put

up another chart, this time listing the name of cooking ingredients and food

items.

‘‘We use it as a regular glossary. Sanskrit is not our mother tongue, so

sometimes we need to look up the chart. But most of the time, we manage without

it,’’ says Jha proudly.

 

The professor is one of the many residents in Ganoda village who are confident

that they can carry on an entire conversation in Sanskrit without a problem. The

grocery shop owner claims he can rattle off shlokas in Sanskrit while in the

adjoining utensil store, the owner informs that he helps his children with their

language homework.

 

‘‘Almost everyone can speak or understand the language here,’’ Naresh Doshi

says. ‘‘I studied only till class VIII but I still manage in Sanskrit. We don’t

speak it at home all the time, but we understand and if someone comes to my shop

and asks for something in Sanskrit, I’ll know what to give.’’

 

In this tribal-dominated village, Sanskrit is slowly becoming a way of life.

Slogans

in Sanskrit make the village walls, the language spoken in practically every

house and every school-going child rattling off a few sentences.

 

The entire process actually started by default. Until about 10 years ago, Ganoda

village was like any other in Banswada district of Rajasthan. Tribal dominated,

average literacy levels and a non-descript entity.

 

But the growing number of students passing out of the government Sanskrit

college in Ganoda changed all that. Over 1,000 students in the three Sanskrit

institutions of the village — a primary school, middle school and the college —

have joined hands with a group of their teachers to try and make Sanskrit the

second language of the Wagdi-speaking population.

 

In 14-year-old Dharmesh Joshi’s house, almost everyone understands a smattering

of the language. ‘‘My mother can’t speak very well but everyone else manages.

Now I have attended a few Sanskrit camps and we are slowly trying to teach

others.’’

 

Kanhaiya Lal Yadav is a first generation learner from his tribal household in

Dukhvada. ‘‘We speak Wagdi at home but with my friends I often debate in

Sanskrit,’’ says the undergraduate student. Jha adds: ‘‘We decided recently to

try and take the language to as many people as possible. There’s already an

atmosphere of learning that has been created over the years. Now we are trying

to reach out to people in remote villages and initiate them into the world of

Sanskrit.’’

 

And to spread the good word, the teachers and students are practically going

door-to-door, teaching, putting up posters and impressing many with their

synchronised recital of shlokas. For the motivated Sanskrit-speaking lot of

Ganoda, the ultimate aim is to make it a unique and model Sanskrit village.

Their punchline is ‘‘don’t say hello, say Hari Om.’’

 

 

 

 

 

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