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In a country as diverse and complex as India, it is not surprising
to find that people here reflect the rich glories of the past,
the culture, traditions and values relative to geographic
locations and the numerous distinctive manners, habits and
food that will always remain truly Indian. According to five
thousand years of recorded history.
From the eternal snows of the Himalayas to the cultivated
peninsula of far South, from the deserts of the West to the
humid deltas of the East, from the dry heat and cold of the
Central Plateau to the cool forest foothills, Indian lifestyles
clearly glorify the geography. The food, clothing and habits
of an Indian differ in accordance to the place of origin.
Indians believe in sharing happiness and sorrow. A festival
or a celebration is never constrained to a family or a home.
The whole community or neighbourhood is involved in bringing
liveliness to an occasion. A lot of festivals like Diwali,
Holi, Id, Christmas, Mahaveer Jayanthi are all celebrated
by sharing sweets and pleasantries with family, neighbours
and friends. An Indian wedding is an occasion that calls for
participation of the family and friends. Similarly, neighbours
and friends always help out a family in times of need.
Ethnically Indians speak different languages, follow different
religions, eat the most diverse varieties of food all of which
add to the rich Indian culture.The beauty of the Indian people
lies in the spirit of tolerance, give-and-take and a composition
of cultures that can be compared to a garden of flowers of
various colours and shades of which, while maintaining their
own entity, lend harmony and beauty to the garden - India!
India is a land of a variety of linguistic communities, each
of which share a common language and culture. Though there
could be fifteen principal languages there are hundreds of
thousands dialects that add to the vividness of the country.
18 languages are officially recognized in India of which
Sanskrit and Tamil share a long history of more than 5,000
and 3,000 years respectively. The population of people speaking
each language varies drastically. For example Hindi has 250
million speakers, while Andamanese is spoken by relatively
fewer people.
Tribal or Aboriginal language speaking population in India
may be more than some of the European languages. For instance
Bhili and Santali both tribal languages have more than 4 million
speakers. The vividness can be ascertained by the fact that
schools in India teach more than 50 different languages; there
are Films in 15 languages, Newspapers in 90 or more languages
and radio programmes in 71 languages!
Indian languages come from four distinct families, which
are: Indo-European, Dravidian, Mon-Khmer, and Sino-Tibetan.
Majority of Indian population uses Indo-European and Dravidian
languages. The language families divide India geographically
too.
Indo-European languages dominate the northern and central
India while in south India; mainly languages of Dravidian
origin are spoken. In eastern India languages of Mon-Khmer
group is popular. Sino Tibetan languages are spoken in the
northern Himalayas and close to Burmese border. In terms of
percentage, 75% of Indian population speaks languages of Indo-European
family, 23% speak languages of Dravidian origin and about
2% of the population speaks Mon-Khmer languages and Sino-Tibetan
languages.
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