India, with more than 19,500 languages and dialects, is losing its linguistic diversity slowly. More than 40 Indian languages are considered critically endangered, with a few having fewer than hundred speakers remaining, according to UNESCO. The erosion is not random—it's a product of systemic neglect, urban migration, and domination by mainstream tongues.
Main causes of language loss
- Dominant languages such as Hindi, English, Bengali, and Tamil dominate over indigenous languages in education, media, and government
- Urban migration results in linguistic change across generations, with children learning dominant languages for socio-economic mobility
- The government curriculum rarely includes tribal or regional languages, limiting exposure and formal education
- Social stigma and perceived inferiority of indigenous languages discourages their use in public and professional settings.
Cultural value and information loss
- Local languages have centuries of information about biodiversity, health, and local geography
- Loss of language equals loss of oral traditions, folklore, and community identity
- Languages such as Mahali, Koro, and Toto are on the brink of extinction, and Aka-Bo disappeared with its last speaker in 2010.
Revival attempts and reports of success
- Programs such as SPPEL seek to document and save threatened languages
- School initiatives and community-based stories festivals are generating new curiosity among youth
- Villages such as Mattur in Karnataka managed to revive Sanskrit as a spoken language India’s linguistic richness is fading not from lack of speakers, but from lack of support. Saving these voices requires urgent policy reform, grassroots action, and digital documentation.
Sources: Mediabird Magazine, The Week, IJFMR, Local Samosa, SEL India Seminar Abstracts