New Delhi:
The Tamil Nadu vs centre ‘language war’ – over the National Education Policy and its three-language formula, which the southern state views as ‘imposition of Hindi’ – exploded inside and outside Parliament Monday with Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan criticising the latter’s ruling Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam for “ruining the future of students (from the state)”. He also used a pejorative – to describe Tamil Nadu – that he later withdrew and was then expunged from the Lok Sabha’s records.
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin, who has called ‘Hindi imposition’ as the act of “entitled bigots” delivered a feisty response; on X he told Mr Pradhan to “mind his words” and said, “The Union Education Minister, who thinks of himself as a king and speaks arrogantly, needs to be disciplined!”
“They (the DMK) are being dishonest. They are not committed to Tamil Nadu students. They are ruining the future of Tamil Nadu students. Their only job is to raise language barriers. They are doing politics… mischief. They are undemocratic,” Mr Pradhan raged in the Lok Sabha.
#WATCH | On the New Education Policy and three language row, Union Education Minister Dharmendra Pradhan says, “…They (DMK) are dishonest. They are not committed to the students of Tamil Nadu. They are ruining the future of Tamil Nadu students. Their only job is to raise… pic.twitter.com/LdBVqwH6le
— ANI (@ANI) March 10, 2025
This followed his earlier claim – that Tamil Nadu had, in fact, agreed to fully implement the new education policy, including its three-language formula, only to backtrack later, allegedly in hopes of using the emotionally charged issue to get votes in next year’s Assembly election.
He also claimed “internal bickering” in the DMK – which has dominated recent elections in the state, including the 2021 Assembly and 2024 Lok Sabha polls – had led to this stand-off.
Mr Pradhan’s remarks triggered a row in the Lok Sabha that was then adjourned for 30 minutes.
DMK MPs then continued to protest against his comment outside the Parliament building.
“Thinks Of Himself As King”
The minister’s jab drew a biting response from Mr Stalin, who said Mr Pradhan “thinks of himself as a king”. “You are insulting the people of Tamil Nadu. Does the Honorable Prime Minister, Narendra Modi, accept this?” Mr Stalin asked, tagging the PM and continuing, “We have not come forward to implement your plan (the three-language formula) … and no one can force us…”
தன்னை மன்னரென எண்ணிக் கொண்டு ஆணவத்துடன் பேசும் ஒன்றியக் கல்வி அமைச்சர் @dpradhanbjp அவர்களுக்கு நாவடக்கம் வேண்டும்!
தமிழ்நாட்டின் நிதியைத் தராமல் ஏமாற்றும் நீங்கள் தமிழ்நாட்டு எம்.பி.க்களைப் பார்த்து அநாகரிகமானவர்கள் என்பதா?
தமிழ்நாட்டு மக்களை அவமானப்படுத்துகிறீர்கள்.… pic.twitter.com/wKQ7FhX3rj
— M.K.Stalin (@mkstalin) March 10, 2025
The Tamil Nadu Chief Minister then demanded a definitive answer from Mr Modi on claims by Mr Pradhan last month – that the centre will withhold funds for the state’s education sector unless it complies with the three-language policy. Mr Stalin had branded this warning as “blackmail”.
“Just answer whether it is possible to release funds belonging to Tamil Nadu students and the taxes collected from us!” he thundered in his post, warning the BJP, as his deputy, Udhayanidhi Stalin had last month, the state had “rejected the National Education Policy entirely”.
BJP, DMK Leaders Snipe
It wasn’t just Mr Pradhan and Mr Stalin firing at each other; ex-Tamil Nadu Governor and BJP leader Tamilisai Soundarajan accused the DMK of denying students from poorer sections the right to study a third language. “When children from affluent families (can) study three languages, why is the same opportunity being denied to poor children… ” she asked.
#WATCH | Chennai | On three-language policy in NEP, BJP leader Tamilisai Soundarajan says,”…They (DMK govt) are denying rights to the poor children of Tamil Nadu. When children from affluent families study three languages, why is the same opportunity being denied to the poor… pic.twitter.com/tY50qy8rPt
— ANI (@ANI) March 10, 2025
Meanwhile, from across the aisle, the DMK’s Dayanidhi Maran and K Kanimozhi hit out at the narrative the party had reneged on a promise to fully implement the new education policy.
#WATCH | Delhi: On 3-language policy under NEP (National Education Policy) row, DMK MP Dayanidhi Maran says, ” …Dharmendra Pradhan lied by saying that DMK govt had agreed (to sign NEP). DMK never agreed to NEP or 3-language policy, all we said that we can’t…why should our… pic.twitter.com/AuVScetFja
— ANI (@ANI) March 10, 2025
“… DMK never agreed to NEP or three-language policy… all we said is our students need not learn three languages while students from the north learn only one. We are not against Hindi… if students want to learn… they are free to do so but it should not be compulsory…” Mr Maran said.
‘Hindi Imposition’
The row over ‘Hindi imposition’ – a sensitive topic in the south, and particularly in Tamil Nadu, where violent ‘anti-Hindi’ riots broke out in the 1960s and which has always been opposed to the language being foisted on it – has re-erupted with the BJP pushing its new education policy.
READ | “Trying To Turn India Into ‘Hindia‘?” Kamal Haasan Echoes Stalin’s 2019 Jab
The DMK argues Tamil Nadu has flourished with a two-language system (Tamil and English) and sees no need for a third. The BJP maintains its formula will benefit people travelling to other states.
In an exclusive interview with The Hindkesharilast month, Mr Pradhan accused the Tamil Nadu government of creating a “false narrative” and depriving students of academic progress for their own political ends.
READ | “Creating Anti-Delhi Narrative”: Education Minister Slams MK Stalin
Last week Mr Stalin and Union Home Minister Amit Shah exchanged jabs.
Mr Shah claimed the centre had done more for Tamil speakers than the state party, pointing to a decision to allow candidates for the Central Armed Police Force entrance test to write in their mother tongue. “I want to urge the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu to take steps towards introducing the curriculum of medical and engineering courses in Tamil as soon as possible,” he declared.
It is important, however, to note the centre approved the conduct of CAPF exams in 13 regional languages, in 2023, days after Mr Stalin protested the decision to conduct it only in Hindi and English.
“This (‘Hindi imposition’) is like an kindergarten student lecturing a PhD holder….” he said.
“History is clear. Those who tried to impose Hindi on Tamil Nadu have either been defeated or later changed their stance and aligned with DMK (the unspoken reference was to the Congress, which was in power at the centre during the anti-Hindi riots of the 1960s and is now a firm ally). Tamil Nadu will not tolerate Hindi colonialism replacing British colonialism,” the Chief Minister responded.
With input from agencies
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