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Punjabis
without Punjabi!
BY
ISHTIAQ AHMED
(IDN) *
For
quite some time now reference is being made on both Pakistani and
Indian Punjabi Internet networks to a UNESCO report that allegedly
predicts that in the next 50 years the Punjabi language will become
extinct. I have tried in vain to get hold of the report to make sure
it is not a hoax.
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My dear friend, Sardar Gobind
Tukhral, has assured me that some such a report did appear, which
warned that many languages were fast disappearing. Languages
threatened with extinction are spoken by miniscule tribes whose
members are dying out or being assimilated into the mainstream.
However, this explanation cannot apply to Punjabi.
Demography and power -- political, economic and military -- do not
suggest that the Punjabis are by any means a weak nationality or
ethnicity. Consider the fact that some 100-120 million human beings
can be classified as ethnic Punjabis. Punjabi is an Indo-Iranian
language within the larger family of Indo-European languages. The
Punjabi people are a mixture of perhaps one of the most varied
ethnic pool in the world, as
Punjab
has been receiving waves and waves of people entering the
subcontinent from the north-western mountain passes, as well as
smaller movements from the south and east of the subcontinent
towards this region.
The current breakdown of the Punjabi people is roughly like this:
Eighty million Punjabis live mainly in Pakistan's western Punjab and
constitute 55 percent of its total population; 30 million in India,
mainly in Indian eastern Punjab but with a strong presence in
Haryana and the greater Delhi region. Roughly, that translates to
three percent of the total Indian population. Some 10 million are
dispersed outside the Indian subcontinent, with strong presence in
Britain
, North America, Southeast Asia (nearly 130,000 Sikhs in
Malaysia
alone) and the
Middle East
. In terms of religious affiliation, some 54 percent are Muslims, 29
percent Hindus and 14 percent Sikhs. A three-percent minority is
Christian.
With regard to power, the situation is even more dramatic. Pakistan
is virtually a Punjabi state in terms of political, military and,
now, even economic power. On the other hand, while in
India
Punjabis are a small minority they are one of the most prosperous
nationalities,
East Punjab
being one of the top three big states enjoying the highest per
capita income. The Indian military has a disproportionately larger
number of Punjabis, especially among officers.
Three Indian prime ministers -- Gulzari Lal Nanda, Inder Kumar
Gujral and Dr Manmohan Singh -- can be classified as bona fide
Punjabis, while the mother of Jawaharlal Nehru was not only a
Punjabi but from Lahore. Two Nobel Prize winners have been Punjabis:
Professor Hargobind Khorana from
India
and Professor Abdus Salam from
Pakistan
. When it comes to Bollywood and Lollywood as well as cricket and
other sports, Punjabis are conspicuous in all these branches of
public life. Given such favourable data, how do we explain the rapid
decline of the Punjabi language?
We need to understand this in terms of both historical and
contemporary contexts. With regard to the historical explanation, it
is to be noted that Punjabi never attained the status of state
language of a sovereign state at any point in time and remained the
language of the common people. However, between the 16th and first
half of the 19th century Punjabi culture flourished as the Sikh
Gurus, Muslim sufis and the Hindu bhagtis ventilated their
anti-establishment messages in a strong Punjabi idiom. However, when
the only son of the soil, Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1799-1839), founded
a kingdom in this region, official communications continued to be
conducted in Persian.
After the annexation of
Punjab
by the British in 1849, they decided to introduce Urdu as the state
language as it was already in use in other territories under British
control. It was also felt that urban Punjabi was a close kin of Urdu
and Hindi. This is, of course, true and there is no reason not to
acknowledge this affinity. In any case, Punjabi never received the
patronage of the state. The first modern Punjabi dictionary was
produced in the mid-19th century by Christian missionaries based in
Ludhiana
.
The first half of the 20th century found the communal virus
infecting Punjabi identity. Ironically, the first provocation came
from the Sikhs, when Bhai Vir Singh (1872-1957) began to insist that
the Punjabi language was the exclusive preserve of the Sikhs. Not
surprisingly, both Hindus and Muslims who had strong cultural links
with the rest of
India
began to assert that their "mother tongue" was Hindi and
Urdu, respectively. Such communalisation culminated in the partition
of
India
in 1947, which in reality was the partition of Punjab and
Bengal
. The partition of
Punjab
took place over the bodies of 800,000 to 1,000,000 Punjabis. The
veteran Indian journalist Rajinder Puri captured the agony of the
Punjabis in the following words:
"After partition the Punjabis disappeared. In
West Punjab
they became Pakistanis. In
East Punjab
they became Hindus and Sikhs. They also became Akalis and
Congressmen, Arya Samajists and Jan Sanghis. Never Punjabis."
This was written in 1985. One can expand on this process of fission
and say that the Pakistani Muslim Punjabis became Sunnis, Shias and
Ahmadis, and from time to time one hears also about them becoming
Saraiki-speakers and Potohari-speakers in opposition to the Lahori-speaking
Punjabis, while in India, besides the Hindu-Sikh distinction, the
Sikhs went on to distinguish themselves as Khalsas and other sects.
In Pakistani Punjab, Punjabi continued to be degraded as an inferior
language, and if ever a case of self-inflicted cultural suicide, or
rather genocide is to be taken up by the Security Council (under the
UN Convention on Genocide cultural genocide is considered a major
crime against humanity), it will be the sui generis mistreatment by
the Punjabi ruling elites of Pakistan of their own mother tongue.
The situation is better in Indian Punjab because Sikh identity is
inseparable from the Punjabi language and Punjabi is the official
language of that province, but Hindi and English are encroaching
upon Punjabi as Sikh peasants become urban dwellers and develop
unorthodox lifestyles.
In the next month's article we will review what can be done to
restore Punjabi to its proper status among the living languages of
the world. To fight the uphill battle for Punjabi we would need the
help of all Punjabis.
__________
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This
article was first published in the News
International . The author is a visiting
senior research fellow at the Institute of South Asian Studies (ISAS),
National University of Singapore on leave from the University of
Stockholm. Email: isasia@nus.edu.sg.
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