Mk stalin on language policy: Tamil Nadu Chief Minister MK Stalin has welcomed the unity in Maharashtra against three-language policy. Stalin has already been trying an attempt to impose this policy to Hindi. Now two big leaders of Maharashtra Uddhav Thackeray and Raj Thackeray have also come with him on this issue.
On Saturday, there was a rally named ‘Voice of Marathi’ in Mumbai, in which the Maharashtra government welcomed the withdrawal of the three-language policy. In this rally, Uddhav Thackeray and Raj Thackeray came on a stage after years and hugged each other. He said that now the distance between them is over. Both leaders were already against this policy. They believe that Marathi language should get priority and Hindi should not be imposed on anyone.
Stalin said- ‘Good start’
Stalin said that it is a good sign that leaders from different parts of the country are coming together to protect regional languages. He hoped that this unity would send a message to the central government that the linguistic diversity of India should be respected.
இந்தித் இந்தித் முறியடிக்க முறியடிக்க திராவிட முன்னேற்றக் முன்னேற்றக், தமிழ்நாட்டு மக்களும் தலைமுறை தலைமுறை தலைமுறையாக உரிமைப் போர் போர் போர், மாநில கடந்து இப்போது மராட்டியத்தில் போராட்டச் போராட்டச் சூறாவளியாகச் சுழன்றடித்துக்.
தமிழ்நாட்டுப் பள்ளிகளில் மூன்றாவது மொழியாக…
– mkstalin (@mkstalin) July 5, 2025
Under this policy, students will have to learn three languages, one of which can also be Hindi, but so far only two languages (Tamil and English) are taught in Tamil Nadu. Stalin says that the people of Tamil Nadu have already opposed the imposition of Hindi and will still do it. He said that Tamil is his mother tongue and he will not let it go back under any circumstances.
MK Stalin said this big thing
After the rally on Saturday, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M.K. Stalin said that now the fight for language rights has crossed the boundaries of the state and has reached Maharashtra.
Stalin wrote in Tamil, “The people of Tamil Nadu and the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam (DMK) have struggled against imposing Hindi from generation to generation to generation, it has now come out of the boundaries of the state and is spreading like a wave of protest in Maharashtra.”
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