There is no other Indian language that is as common as Hindi. In India there are various variants from north to south or east to west.
Hindi spoken in Rajasthan is different from what is spoken in Haryana. That is different from what UP, Bihar, MP, HP etc said.
Even those in countries that do not speak Hindi have something to do with Hindi, as their native language and Hindi come from the same language Sanskrit.
I agree that some people abuse the official position of Hindi and offend other language users, but in the long run Indian people are living in Indian languages will be needed.
In addition, in India, we have many ancient classical languages. They also enrich the country and Hindi, so we also need them to prosper.
These two rivers are the lifeblood of the flowing country, the mother of millions of children, and deserve the same respect.
But please imagine that there is only one river flowing through India.
Hindi (Santokrit) is written in Sanskrit and is influenced by Sanskrit, one of the most important and important languages in history. Hindi is the official language of the Government of India and is one of 22 languages recognized in India. There are approximately 545 million people who speak Hindi in India. I think that 425 million people are their primary languages. It is the fourth most widely spoken language in the world. Outside of India, Hindi is used as the official language of Fiji, and 380,000 people use it. In 1997 it was called Hindustani, but the Constitution changed it to Hindi in 2013. There are also many Hindi communities in the United States (649,000), the UK (45,800), and South Africa (250,000). ), Mauritius (450,000 people), Nepal (649,000 people)
In the Constitution, Hindi is declared as an official language, not national languages. Article 343 defines ITU official languages including Sanskrit and Hindi English. Hindi is still the most commonly used mother tongue in the country, but nearly 60% of Indians speak languages other than Hindi. In 1950, the Constitution proclaimed English as a official language of the Union with Hindi in Sanskrit. According to the Constitution, Congressional affairs can be done in Hindi or English. Unless Congress chooses to extend its use, and unless Congress has been expanded by the "official language law" of 1963, the use of English in Congressional proceedings will be abolished at the end of 15 years. However, since the state has freedom and authority to designate its own official language to pass the law, there are 22 recognized languages in India.