Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi? Is it because Hindi is associated with India and Hindus?


LAHORE - Shanzay Ali, a mother of three, is upset over the changes she detects in her children’s everyday language. She says her children, Faizan, 8, Momina, 10, and Salman, 12, frequently use Hindi words in their everyday speech. “Cable television is responsible,” Shanzay says, “The language the next generation will speak is being transformed.”

http://www.pakistantoday.com.pk/2012/01/‘my-children-speak-hindi-what-do-i-do’/

The rise of Hindi channels: While most imagined the Hindi-Urdu controversy would end with the creation of Pakistan, the debate is rising as inter-cultural interaction increases. The rise of Hindi-dubbed channels, with Hindi being the closest equivalent to Urdu, means children have begun to watch both informative and cultural programs in the Hindi language. Over 70% of channels being broadcast are either in Hindi or been dubbed in Hindi, with all children’s channels being broadcast in Hindi.

“What can be done? Children love watching cartoons and all cartoon channels have been dubbed in Hindi,” complained Shanzay.

Broadcast channels in Pakistan are transmitted from two sources; satellite and cable-networking. Cable operators have shown a preference for Hindi-dubbed over English channels to cater to an audience that rarely understands English.

Out of the top five channels watched by children; Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon, Baby Tv, Disney and Pogo; four are in Hindu, while one is in English. Similarly, all three informative channels, National Geographic, Animal Planet and History Channel are only available in Hindi on cable networks. Indian movie and Indian drama channels are also aplenty.
Only Hindi children’s programming: “All that children like to watch is available in Hindi. One can’t stop children from watching TV and I prefer my children not watch news channels,” said Ayesha Malik, a class 6 teacher and a mother of two. She said, “Children speak Hindi words in class too, but the school environment is not responsible for the change…televisions are.” Ayesha said, “Children subconsciously learn words like vishaal, shanti, mukti and adhikaar and use them in conversation at school.”

Talking to Pakistan Today, PEMRA Regional General Manager Khurram Siddique said only foreign channels given permission are being broadcasted. “All Indian channels are banned by PEMRA, and changing the language of the channel from English to Hindi is considered a violation,” said Khurram. He said cable operators are not allowed to change the language of approved channels and PEMRA keeps a check on the matter.

‘It’s public demand:’ Ijaz Mustafa, a cable operator in Allama Iqbal Town, said that they used to transmit children’ channels in English language but switched to Hindi on public demand. “People called and asked us to change the language to Hindi,” he said. He said competition between cable operators means that not- complying with a clients request means clients switch cable operators.

Culture guardians: Amjad Islam Amjad, a renowned poet and writer, looks at the picture from the perspective of globalization. Speaking to Pakistan Today, Amjad said, “We must understand that the world of today is the world of the economy and market. Instead of banning foreign channels, we must come up with better Urdu programming.” Amjad said, “The task begins at home. Mothers are responsible for reviving the value of Urdu and local languages.”

Orya Maqbool Jan, analyst and column writer, said media had no serious Urdu programming other than talk shows. He said no documentaries are made, no urdu cartoon channels are available and this is the media’s responsibility. He said media should operate in their own business environment and PEMRA should facilitate them. Jan demanded PEMRA ban Hindi-dubbed channels to create the space for new channels to come

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

Hum is sthithi se parischit nahin they. Bohuth gambhir mamla hai. Avashya is vathavaran ko sheegra hee badhalna chahiye.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

I picked up Urdu primarily from Hindi films. I sometimes sing Vande Mataram at the Pak Independence Day mela. All limbs intact thus far.

I happen to be cute so my parents can't disown me.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

most of the kids i know who have picked up hindi kid around when they use those words and dont use them in serious language.
but language changes and evolves, dont see an issue with it. People can take extreme steps by banning channel in pakistan or case in point, until there was the deliberate sansikritization movement in bollywood, the movies were essentially urdu, regardless of whether it was called hindi or hindustani.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

Maybe Pakistan should take the Canadian approach towards this

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

main aik buhat hi desh premi pakistani hon aur apni desh ki perhion aur jawano ko istarah say shud hindi kay shabd bolta dekh kar mera dil khoon kay anso rota hai.

mujhy chimta hai ager yehi mudda raha to aik din pakistan kay tamam mahashy hindi bhasha bolna shoru kar dain gain.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

kafi ghambeer samasiya hai :hmmm:

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

Well it is all in the parents' hands.
If star plus is on 24/7 in your house then it is your own mistake as parent if your kids are going to use hindi terms and if they pich up other stuff from those dramas.

Then don't come back whining that your kid was taking your aarti and said 'hey bhagwan' instead of Ya ALLAH.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

this language phobia is plain stupid. its always good to learn other languages. i know urdu and in india urdu isnt considered foreign language , case in point is bollywood movies.
i would love to learn bangla, french, marathi, spanish etc etc...

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

the parents shouldnt worry they should start learning hindi themselves to communicate with their kids. If they are worried they shouldnt watch hindi programs themselves.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

Parantu balakon ki waja se mataa pitah phir se paat shala kiyun jaen? Yeh anniiy'ae hai!

On a serious note, why there is a problem in learning a language which is the base of Urdu? Why don't parents get worried when there children can't speak a single Urdu sentence without mixing English words?

PS: As far as the issue of adapting traditions of another culture is concerned, parents should teach/guide their children as to what is acceptable and whats not.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

if though pakistani children speak hindi there is no problem look at kkf he is good at urdu and from where he belongs hindi is first language....

urdu=hindi little bit of vocabulary is different for common man

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

if though pakistani children speak hindi there is no problem look at kkf he is good at urdu and from where he belongs hindi is first language....

urdu=hindi little bit of vocabulary is different for common man

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

http://www.dawn.com/2011/12/18/urdus-origin-its-not-a-camp-language.html

I grew up hearing that Urdu was a “lashkari zabaan”…meaning a mix of Arabic, Persian, Farsi, Sanskrit, Turkish etc…

This article I linked above claims that Urdu is much, much, much older than just the Mughal camps…and that is over 90% based in Sanskrit. If that’s the case, why the heck would any Pakistani parent object to their child using “Hindi” vocabulary. Why does it matter???

Again, I think this is a classic case of cultural bias…I can totally understand parents concerned about their children being influenced by the onslaught of hindu *religious *exposures in watching all those Star plus/Zee Tv programming…let’s face it, they are all pretty much one big puja/paat sessions…however, gettiing your panties in a wad about your kid using a Hindi word…c’mon…I’m pretty sure we all have bigger things to worry about with our children… :smack:

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

Pakistan was created on the premise of hate India and anything related to Hindu. this attitude was made a USP for the existence of Pakistan. See what you Pakistanis got. Cinema has gone, literature moving out, Economy satyanash, law and order coming to zero, but still the hatred should remain till the day your state becomes a symbol of absolute failure in the world.
Please come out of this stupor,this narrow mindedness, learn more and more world languages, don't hate any particular culture. Where in any holy scripture of Islam is it written to maintain continuous hatred against any culture ? Don't forget we were one a few years back.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

All I can say in reply to your post is : Taali dono hathon se bajti hai. Pakistan is a reality and having something common and many things uncommon than India.

All the failures (in your opinion) you mentioned can be traced back to inception of the country and yes hatred (both sides) played major role in it.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

I dont understand the fuss. Lots of Urdu words have seeped into mainstream Hindi and I consider the language richer for it.

Not that much difference between the two languages. Understanding the spelling initially was a challenge. We say Padhayee, you say Parayei, our dha becomes your ra - most words are the same.

Muqawee speaks "shudher" Hindi than me - so there!

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

In M.E. every other Paki speaks urdu in hindi accent. Jaisa desh waisa bhes.

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

:D i actually used to sing the pak "aye watan pak watan" and was hooked on singing it after i heard amanat ali sing it on that music show. It is truly a beautiful sounding song....

Re: Should Pakistanis worry that their children speak Hindi?

Only the folks who are making a serious attempt to teach their kids Urdu should worry about them learning Hindi. Others, stop making a fuss...it wasnt the little bacha who rented chamak challo now was it?