Apex Court dismisses plea to declare Sanskrit as national language



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Giving a language ‘national’ status could be a policy decision that needs amendment to the Constitution, and not ordered by the court, the Supreme Court said on Friday while dismissing a public interest litigation (PIL) seeking Sanskrit to be declared as a national language.

“This lies within the realm of policy decision and even for the aforesaid, Constitution of India is to be amended. No writ will be issued to Parliament for declaring a language as a national language,” a bench of justices MR Shah and Krishna Murari said.

The apex court made the observations while hearing a PIL filed by DG Vanzara, a retired bureaucrat, and a lawyer.

“How many cities in India speak Sanskrit? this is often a policy decision. We cannot issue a writ to the Centre to require a selected policy decision,” the bench remarked.

Vanzara said he wants a discussion on this by the Centre and a nudge by the court can go an extended thanks to promote that at the govt level.

The bench, in an exceedingly lighter vein, asked the petitioner, “Do you speak Sanskrit? are you able to recite one line in Sanskrit or a minimum of translate the prayer in your writ petition to Sanskrit.” Vanzara shared a Sanskrit shloka but the bench replied, “This we all know.”

Vanzara then quoted a former judge of the erstwhile Supreme Court of Calcutta during country Raj when Sir William Jones commented that out of the 22 languages he studied, Sanskrit was clearly the mother language. “We share that view. we all know that several words in Hindi and other state languages have come from Sanskrit. But this can not be the bottom to declare the language as a national language. For us to declare a language is extremely difficult.”

The petitioner argued that under Article 32, the highest court possesses ample scope and a beginning can be made during this direction by seeking the Centre’s view on this issue. “This debate needs to happen in Parliament,” the bench replied.

Dismissing the plea, the bench added that if the petitioner is so advised to maneuver a representation, he could also be at liberty to file such a representation before the govt.