Indian Languages In South Africa
- All
- News
-
"Proud Indian": Mithali Raj Slams Troll Who Criticised Her Language Preference On Twitter
- Wednesday October 16, 2019
- Written by Ajay Pal Singh
Mithali Raj slammed a troll on Twitter who tried to question her language preference after India's clean sweep over South Africa in the three-match ODI series.
-
sports.ndtv.com
-
Indian Languages Continue To Enrich South African Society: PM Modi
- Saturday July 9, 2016
- India News | Indo-Asian News Service
Indian languages like Hindi, Tamil and Telugu continue to enrich the fabric of South African society, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Friday.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Indian languages to be official subjects in South African schools
- Thursday March 20, 2014
- India News | Press Trust of India
Nearly two decades after Indian languages were removed from the official curriculum in South African state schools, Hindi, Tamil, Gujarati, Telugu and Urdu are to be reinstated following pleas by a representative group of the country's 1.4 million citizens of Indian origin.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
"Proud Indian": Mithali Raj Slams Troll Who Criticised Her Language Preference On Twitter
- Wednesday October 16, 2019
- Written by Ajay Pal Singh
Mithali Raj slammed a troll on Twitter who tried to question her language preference after India's clean sweep over South Africa in the three-match ODI series.
-
sports.ndtv.com
-
Indian Languages Continue To Enrich South African Society: PM Modi
- Saturday July 9, 2016
- India News | Indo-Asian News Service
Indian languages like Hindi, Tamil and Telugu continue to enrich the fabric of South African society, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said on Friday.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Indian languages to be official subjects in South African schools
- Thursday March 20, 2014
- India News | Press Trust of India
Nearly two decades after Indian languages were removed from the official curriculum in South African state schools, Hindi, Tamil, Gujarati, Telugu and Urdu are to be reinstated following pleas by a representative group of the country's 1.4 million citizens of Indian origin.
-
www.ndtv.com