Box 12.05
On 15"' November, 1948 at the behest of Master Tara Singh, Twenty three Akali legislators asserted that if five statutory safeguards in their demands were not accepted, they should be allowed to form a separate province comprising of seven Districts of Ludhiana, Ferozepur, Amritsar, Gurdaspur, Jalandhar and Hoshiarpur. Punjabi Suba was given as an alternative slogan. But in April, 1949, Sikh convention declared Punjabi Suba as its sole objective. The demands for separate electorate and reservation of seats for Sikhs in the legislature were out rightly rejected by the then constituent assembly. For adoption of Punjabi language, Bhim Singh Sacchar, then Chief Minister of Punjab evolved a formula. According to this formula, the province was divided into two zones - the Hindi Zone and the Punjabi Zone.
A Separate Linguistic State
The Nehru-Master Pact
Box 12.06
Political scientists like Paul Brass have suggested that it was the process of the elite formation that gave momentum to Punjab Struggle. This period also witnessed a split in Akali Dal. Master Tara Singh and Sant Fateh Singh’s stand on creating a linguistic state within the territorial boundaries of India nation state was vindicated. Sant Fateh Singh temporarily suspended the movement at the time of Chinese aggression in 1962. The movement resurrected itself alter the death of Kairon and Pt. Nehru in 1964. Lai Bahadur Shastri’s regime also continued to resist the demand for ‘Punjabi Suba’. After the failure of talks with Shastri Government, Sant Fateh Singh announced from Akal Takht on 16lh August, 1965 that if his demands were not met, he would fast unto death from 10"1 September, 1965. He further emotionalised his demand saying that if he survived the fast for fifteen days, he would immolate himself on the fifteenth day. On 5"’ September, 1965, Indo-Pak War started. During War, Sikhs proved their valour once again.
The Santhali Language Movement
The Language Movement of the Mishings
Ethno Linguistic Aspirations of the Jayantia
Language and Culture
The linguistic diversity in India is vast, with languages belonging to several different families. The Austric family has two main subfamilies, Australasian and Austro-Asiatic, with the latter further divided into Mon-Khemer and Munda branches. The Karen and Man families are spoken in regions outside the Indian mainland, while the Tibeto-Chinese family includes the Tibeto-Burman subfamily, which has three branches: Tibeto-Himalayan, North Assam, and Assam-Burmese. The Dravidian family is primarily spoken by the Dravidian ethnic group and is divided into three groups: South, Central, and North Dravidian. Finally, the Indo-European family has three branches: Iranian, Dardic or Pisacha, and Indo-Aryan, with the latter being the most widely spoken branch in India and further divided into outer, intermediate, and inner sub-branches. This linguistic diversity showcases the rich cultural heritage of the Indian subcontinent.
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