Mathur – A Karnataka Village That Speaks in Sanskrit

Sanskrit, or Samskrita, is the primary tongue of the villagers in Mattur, or Mathur Village in Karnataka. The village, which is around 10 km from Shimoga, having been making sure that the ancient language flourishes in their village.

Subha J Rao writes in the Magazine section of The Hindu about this interesting village and the effort the villagers are taking in keeping Sanskrit alive.

Some excerpts from the article

The seed for change was sown in 1982, when the organization, Samskruta Bharathi, got together a 10-day programme to teach the villagers spoken Sanskrit. And, people in this primarily agricultural society eagerly took part in the unique experiment. Now, Sanskrit has become the primary tongue for many of the residents.

This village and the neighboring Hosahalli are mainly populated by Sanketis, who speak Sanskrit at home. And, it is not just them who speak the language. The village has a fair share of people from other communities, and all of them are exposed to Sanskrit. Local teachers attribute the fluency to the dedication with which a “new language’ was learnt.

Another village that converses in Sanskrit in India is Jhiri village in Rajgarh District of Madhya Pradesh. This was reported a year ago in the visual media.



25 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great and Hats off to the villagers.

Anonymous said...

Hats off to those people. I think every person in India should speak Sanskrit and it should be used as official language instead of India.

Anonymous said...

Awesome ppl,im really proud to be tht im a mangalorite.. Hats off for the village ppl frm mathur.they r really makin india proud.gr8 goin.

Akki said...

I came to know of this extra-ordinary fact only through the Bajaj Discover ads. Once I get back to India, visit to this town is the first thing on my agenda.
Having learnt Sanskrit for 6 years, I would really like to polish my skills with people who actually speak the language I love.
Easiest way to kill any language is to take it out of daily use. Sanskrit is considered to be a dead language because it is not spoken in daily use anymore. This way we will be able to revive this beautiful language with a rich heritage.

Anonymous said...

Fantastic information. Would love to know how they conduct commerce. That should prove whether the language is mobile and portable. Another thing: I'm a mathur, a kayastha community that is said to have originated in Mathura. Cheers!

Shrinidhi Hande said...

I visited this place recently.. Very nice one

Anonymous said...

THE LANGUAGE OF THE GODS HAS TO BE ALIVE.ANY ONE WILLING TO SPONSER JUST ONE CHILD DURING VACATIONS CAN EMAIL ME AT AMALKUMARV@REDIFFMAIL.COM

Anonymous said...

I am amazed to learn about Sanskrit being spoken in Mathur. Thanks to Bajaj for an innovative advertisement and also for sharing this great information to the world. We should be proud to be Indian and start learning Sanskrit language. Pretty soon we should see the revival of Sanskrit, origin of all the world languages. Hopefully everyone of us will take a positive step to learn and speak Sanskrit. Namaskarah Mathur Graama vaasah.

Dinesh TVPM said...

it really nice to learn that Sanskrit is being spoken in Mathur.

Bajaj has really done a great job in bringing this information to the whole world. thanks to there ad.

After knowing about this info, many people will be encouraged to take up the idea of learning sanskrit..

nishneer said...

really appreciate the matur people.

rjsmita said...

Visiting this village goes on my "once to do in my life" list ... wht a discovery i say!

Hemant said...

how i wish every person speaks in Sanskrit in India then there would not be any language barrier because every one would be equal and as they say Sanskrit is mother of all languages.

Ajaykumar said...

I know about this village a few months back when i wiki it.i am very happy when i saw the news, thanks to the bajaj Discover ads which will now reached billions of people to know about the village. Sanskrit is a good,god,knowledge language & many things to say. We will under stand many thing about the Hindu & Hinduism , which is not a religion but the high value culture.

Folks if you want a good Sanskrit dictionary please visit http://spokensanskrit.de/
& to learn visit https://www.samskritabharati.org
thank you,

amar said...

I proud to be aan indian. i didnt know abt vilkage like this. but now it is now in focus. it really a gr8 honour

Harry said...

a very special thanks to bajaj for for spreading this wonderful and an amazing knowledge about india that today still their are people who speak sanskrit..and the people of that village are making india proud.

Sudarshan said...

I'm proud to be a Shimogan... :)

SharathCV said...

Thanks very much for this valuable information. I will surely visit this place once.

Anonymous said...

may be India is the only country to lose its liberty(language).i.e.sanskrit.as because no other country in the world has a record of vanishing of the mother land language which is the only key to the lock of slavery.hats off to the villagers for preserving such a beautiful & holy language;Inspite of the great influence of the western culture their efforts in still prevailing the nation's pride is admirable.hope the influence would propagate soon throghout the mother earth...........

Anonymous said...

I knew about this village,it nice to read about them, hats off to the people of Mathur they have proved that the word impossible says that "I'm possible"

kushal said...

i am proud to say tht i am one from tht village actually they are conducting a get together on 31-12-2010 and 1-01-2011 so if any of them interested can cum there

kanakvi said...

it is very proud that in our country india still people speak sanskrit.thanxx for sharing such a wonderful information........

ramesh said...

I AM FROM MATHUR AND VERY PROUD TO BE BELONGING TO THIS PLACE IT IS REALLY A HEAVEN IN A RICH KARNATAKA STATE

devendra said...

Its really amazing to know that still somewhere in India Sanskrit is in common use.It is the ancient poetic philosophical language of rich heritage and literature.I would like to visit this village.

Suneesh Namboodiri said...

Namasthe,

I would like to visit this place .. very Nice information.

Krishan Gupta said...

If u lost ur language & culture then be ready u will become slave of others very soon

Post a Comment

All comments are moderated and will appear only after approval. If you like to contact me - hindublog@gmail.com.