As part of the programme, a total of 2,500 people divided into 12 groups would be travelling to Varanasi by train during the month-long period. The journey points in Tamil Nadu would be Chennai, Rameswaram and Coimbatore. The groups would include students, teachers, artisans and people from various walks of life.
“It would be an eight-day tour package,” the Minister said launching the online registration for the tours. He said that the tours would include seminars, lectures, group meetings and visits to the Kashi Vishwanath temple and centres of important Tamil cultural heritage in Varanasi. The “360-degree” cultural connectivity would also include a slice of the culinary traditions of Tamil Nadu.
The Centre’s decision comes at a time the Tamil Nadu government on Tuesday moved a resolution against ‘Hindi imposition’ in the State Assembly. Chief Minister M.K. Stalin had earlier written to Prime Minister Narendra Modi against “continuous efforts to promote Hindi in the name of one nation”. The chief minister was opposing a purported suggestion of a Parliamentary panel to prioritise the language in public offices and central educational institutions.
Denying any link between the Hindi debate and the launch of this programme, Mr Pradhan said, “This is not a reactionary programme. We had been trying to launch this for the past six months”.
“The Prime Minister has earlier said that all languages are national languages and no language will be imposed on the other.”
“The Home Minister has also said that in Hindi-speaking areas it should be the link language and in other areas, the local languages should be the link language. This is our policy, all regional languages are national languages,” the Minister added.
The knowledge partners for the Kashi-Tamil Nadu Sangamam programme would be IIT-Madras and the Banaras Hindu University, while the Uttar Pradesh government would be the host State.
The other stakeholders would be departments of culture, textiles, food processing, commerce and films.