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On the evening of Monday, 15 May, a rather haste press conference called by the State Education Minister of West Bengal, Partha Chatterjee, revealed the major decision of making Bengali compulsory in all schools – even the private English medium schools, according to a report published by The Hindu.
This decision with its multi-fold implications on the cultural and political fronts, stated that Bengali will now be a compulsory language till Class X across all schools irrespective of the board they are affiliated to.
So far, Bengali was not a mandatory language out of the three languages taught in schools. Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee on 14 May, through a Facebook post, clarified that this was the “three-language agenda” of the state government, according to a report by The Indian Express. Her Facebook post said:
Mamata Banerjee believes that this method adopted by her government will enable students to reach regional, national and international standards.
The decision, however, brings with it speculations about Mamata trying to promote regionalism and perhaps curate political favouritism and support out of it.
Biswanath Chakraborty, Professor of Political Science at Rabindra Bharti University, thinks the move is fuelled by political motives.
After a similar decision taken by the Kerala government to make Malayalam compulsory in all schools of the state earlier in April this year, the question if it is a purely academic move lingers.
(With inputs from reports by The Hindu and The Indian Express.)