Buddhist leaders on Saturday met Prime Minister Narendra Modi and expressed their gratitude for the central government’s decision to include Pali as a ‘classical language’.
In a significant gesture, Buddhist leaders during the meeting also recited some verses in Pali as a mark of appreciation.
Click here to connect with us on WhatsApp
The Pali language is sacred language for Buddhists as it is the language of the Theravada Buddhist scriptures, known as the Pali Canon, which contains the core teachings of the Buddha. It connects practitioners with the historical roots of Buddhism, enriching their understanding of key concepts like impermanence, suffering, and non-self.
The Buddha used Pali to deliver his sermons and his followers used it to spread his teachings throughout the world.
The Union Cabinet on Thursday approved to confer the status of classical language to Marathi, Pali, Prakrit, Assamese, and Bengali languages.
The Government of India introduced the “classical language” category on October 12, 2004, first declaring Tamil as a classical language.
The government set criteria for the status, requiring that the language must have high antiquity with early texts or recorded history over a thousand years old, a body of ancient literature or texts considered a valuable heritage, and an original literary tradition not borrowed from another speech community.
A Linguistic Experts Committee (LEC) was established by the Ministry of Culture under Sahitya Akademi in November 2004 to examine proposed languages for classical status.
The criteria were revised in November 2005, and Sanskrit was subsequently declared a classical language.
The Government of India has conferred classical language status to Tamil (2004), Sanskrit (2005), Telugu (2008), Kannada (2008), Malayalam (2013), and Odia (2014).
(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
First Published: Oct 05 2024 | 9:43 PM IST