What's new

Does your country teach in your language ?

Azadkashmir

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 10, 2012
Messages
11,106
Reaction score
-4
Country
Pakistan
Location
United Kingdom
pakistan teaches and speaks in english in schools, colleges, universities.
i believe this is dividing our society, elders wont understand new generation. Due to this we have confused people in our country, who dont understand what is expected of them or asked of them by leaders due to language barriers.
 
.
pakistan teaches and speaks in english in schools, colleges, universities.
i believe this is dividing our society, elders wont understand new generation. Due to this we have confused people in our country, who dont understand what is expected of them or asked of them by leaders due to language barriers.

I thought it was urdu which I believe is equally as bad

I was thinking Farsi would be a good language to connect the lands but Persians are not a people to be looked up too

Don't even think about Arabic because we have nothing in common with them

If we had to pick a regional language then Sindhi would be the best pick

Why Sindhi?

Its the ancient identity of the region and the land was called Al Sindh for a reason by outsiders

The old maps show this region has Sindh

Even when British India tried to invade the region

The locals referred to this region as Sindh as a genetic and cultural distinction from Hind.

The Sindh civilization is tied to the Indus

The Hindu civilization is tied to the Ganges

However Sindh has a lot of of Baloch and African influence too.

This however ties into the diversity aspect of the region.
 
.
Yh I remember towards the end of secondary school Urdu was offered as a GCSE, but it was taught as an after school club, and it was mostly attended by people who were already fluent in it, including some 'freshies' it was missions for me to pass so I dropped out after a few classes, since I couldn't hardly speak it and reading and writing were out of the question..
 
.
Yh I remember towards the end of secondary school Urdu was offered as a GCSE, but it was taught as an after school club, and it was mostly attended by people who were already fluent in it, including some 'freshies' it was missions for me to pass so I dropped out after a few classes, since I couldn't hardly speak it and reading and writing were out of the question..
I have no idea why isn't Mirpuri Pahari an option. Most Pakistanis in the north speak it yet urdu is thrown in there for nothing.
 
. .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom