According to the Constitution, Hindi is declared the official language of the Union Association (Raj - bhAShA), and as long as people want it, English continues to be used, either of which is "eternal". They may have documented that the Constitution, the two languages Hindi and English, are not open this way, but continue to be official languages of the new nation state. This will end the discussion. First generation members that may be moved by patriotism may not want to give eternal status to English. For example, it is not a country where you can use multiple languages as link languages. It is too much. Whether Canadian French and English are official languages or Switzerland is recognized in four languages, the current "national language" is the language the ruling party president speaks.
The term rAShtrabhAShA is used as an alternative to Hindi, except for PSU's Hindi (RajbhaSha) and persons responsible for government agencies. I found it to be used in several books as well. Not only I think this is a wrong advertisement, but until recently all South Indians were called Madarasi.
Bengali language movement, Bhasha Andolon (Linguistic movement) was a political effort of Bangladesh (then known as East Pakistan) and insisted on the recognition of Bengali as the official language of Pakistan. This recognition will make it possible to use Bengali language for government work. It is led by Mufti Nadimul Quamar Ahmed. When the country of Pakistan was established in 1947, the two regions, East Pakistan (aka East Bengal) and West Pakistan were divided along cultural, geographical and linguistic boundaries. On February 23, 1948 the Government of Pakistan designated Urdu as the only national language and evoked a protest action by the vast majority of Bengali speaking East Pakistan. In the face of the growing strain of sectarian tensions and serious discontent with the new law, the government banned public meetings and meetings. On February 21, 1952, students at Dhaka University and other political activists violated the law and caused protests.
Communication: Tamil language Bengali language Punjabi language Kannada language Gujarati language Marathi language German language Malay language language Orayi Mandarin Hindi / Urdu native language English mother tongue 31 Country newspaper Supply of this activity: computer with PowerPoint and LCD projector, Margaret Bourke - White photo Photo of course and course notes on PowerPoint and course notes - Optional: Copy of each photo (for alternate activities below) Options: Photo analysis Worksheet (for alternative activities below)