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Is the Dogri language losing resonance in India?

 Why in News

  • UNESCO (2024 report): India tops the global list of countries with the maximum number of endangered dialects.
  • Dogri, spoken in the Jammu region, faces a sharp decline in usage despite being an official language of J&K (since 2020) and part of the Eighth Schedule (since 2003).
  • Concern raised by linguists like D.G. Rao (former Director, Central Institute of Indian Languages): India lost over 220 languages in the last 50 years.

Relevance

  • GS-1 (Culture): Language as a component of India’s intangible cultural heritage.
  • GS-2 (Governance): Policy implementation gaps in linguistic inclusion.
  • GS-3 (Social Issues): Impact of globalization and migration on cultural identity)

Basic Context

  • Dogri Language:
    • Belongs to the Indo-Aryan family (subgroup: Western Pahari).
    • Spoken mainly in Jammu, parts of Himachal PradeshPunjab, and northern Pakistan.
    • Recognized under Eighth Schedule of the Constitution (92nd Amendment, 2003).
    • Official status in J&K under the Official Languages Act, 2020, alongside Urdu, Hindi, Kashmiri, and English.

Current Issue: Linguistic Extinction Trend

  • Globalisation & Migration:
    • People prioritise economically dominant languages (Hindi, English) for mobility and jobs.
    • Regional languages lose intergenerational transmission.
  • Cultural Assimilation:
    • Younger speakers identify more with national/global culture than regional identity.
  • Digital Neglect:
    • Dogri lacks digital presence (content creation, social media, or e-learning resources).

Survey Insights (Jammu Region)

  • Sample Size: 130 respondents, across 20 locations.
  • Method: Random sampling (intervals of 3–4 households).

Findings:

  • 48%: Government has failed to give adequate policy support.
  • 43.2%: Dogri has little career or employment relevance.
  • Generational Divide:
    • Elderly (>60 years): Fluent speakers.
    • Youth (<30 years): Understand but rarely use Dogri in public/education.

Dimensions

Policy Dimension

  • Delayed Recognition: Dogri added to Eighth Schedule only in 2003, long after languages like Konkani (1992).
  • Implementation Deficit: Despite official status, Dogri not widely used in administration or education.
  • Lack of Institutional Support:
    • Insufficient funding for Dogri literature, teacher training, and curriculum integration.
    • Weak implementation of the National Policy on Languages (draft form).

Socio-Economic Dimension

  • Urban Aspirations: Urban youth prefer Hindi/English for employability.
  • Migration: Outmigration to metros erodes community language use.
  • Media Dominance: Bollywood and digital media reinforce Hindi over Dogri.

Generational Dimension

  • Language Shift: Shift from “mother-tongue use” to bilingualism or language abandonment.
  • Cultural Disconnect: Folklore, songs, oral traditions in Dogri are vanishing due to lack of transmission.

Keywords Explained

Term Explanation
Eighth Schedule List of 22 languages recognized by the Indian Constitution (Article 344(1) & 351) for promotion and representation.
Endangered Language A language at risk of falling out of use because speakers shift to other dominant languages.
Linguistic Diversity Index (LDI) Measures probability that two randomly selected individuals speak different mother tongues; India’s LDI ≈ 0.93 (high).
Language Shift Gradual replacement of one language by another within a speech community.
Revitalization Policy Measures to preserve and promote endangered languages through education, documentation, and media presence.

Constitutional & Institutional Framework

  • Article 29: Protection of linguistic and cultural rights of minorities.
  • Article 350A: Instruction in the mother tongue at the primary stage.
  • Article 351: Duty of the Union to promote the spread of Hindi without interfering with other languages.
  • Central Institute of Indian Languages (CIIL): Apex body for research and preservation.
  • Scheme for Protection and Preservation of Endangered Languages (SPPEL): Launched by Ministry of Education to document endangered tongues.

Challenges Specific to Dogri

  • Low inclusion in school curriculum (except a few optional papers in J&K).
  • Negligible administrative use despite official recognition.
  • Declining literary publication and print media presence.
  • Weak community initiatives for cultural revival.

Comparative Insight

Region Language Revival Strategy Outcome
Northeast India Bodo Added to Eighth Schedule + language academies + textbooks Revival successful
South India Tulu Active digital movement (#TuluOfficialLanguage) Awareness growing
Jammu (Dogri) Dogri Constitutional + official recognition only (no education/media base) Decline continues

Way Forward

  • Educational Integration:
    • Make Dogri mandatory in primary schools in Jammu region.
    • Develop digital Dogri learning platforms.
  • Administrative Implementation:
    • Ensure use of Dogri in local governance, signage, and official documents.
  • Cultural Revitalization:
    • Encourage Dogri theatre, cinema, and literature festivals.
    • Promote Dogri on Doordarshan, AIR, and digital platforms.
  • Documentation & Research:
    • Expand SPPEL coverage with academic partnerships (CIIL, JNU, University of Jammu).

October 2025
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