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Bajjika
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{{Short description|Bihari language of India and Nepal}}







factoids
Bajjika is an Indo-Aryan language variety spoken in parts of Bihar, India and in Nepal.BOOK, Klein, Jared,weblink Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics, Joseph, Brian, Fritz, Matthias, 2017-09-25, Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG, 978-3-11-026128-8, en, It is closely related to Maithili (of which it is often considered a dialect).

Territory and speakers

Bajjika is spoken in the north-western part of Bihar, in a region popularly known as Bajjikanchal.BOOK, Singh, Pradhuman,weblink Bihar General Knowledge Digest: Bestseller Book by Pradhuman Singh: Bihar General Knowledge Digest, 2021-01-19, Prabhat Prakashan, 978-93-5266-769-7, en, In Bihar, it is mainly spoken in the Samastipur, Sitamarhi, Muzaffarpur, Vaishali, Sheohar districts. It is also spoken in a part of the Darbhanga district adjoining Muzaffarpur and Samastipur districts.{{sfn|Abhishek Kashyap|2014|p=1}} A 2013 estimate based on 2001 census data suggests that at the time there were 20 million Bajjika speakers in Bihar (including around 11.46 illiterate adults).{{sfn|Abhishek Kashyap|2014|pp=1-2}}Bajjika is also spoken by a major population in Nepal, where it has 793,416 speakers according to the country's 2011 census. It is the most spoken language in Rautahat and Sarlahi district of Madhesh Province.WEB, 2011 Nepal Census, Social Characteristics Tables,weblink dead,weblink 14 March 2023, 15 September 2019, {{sfn|Abhishek Kashyap|2014|p=2}}

Relationship to Maithili

Bajjika has been classified as a dialect of Maithili.EthnologueWEB, LSI Vol-5 part-2, dsal, 106,weblink WEB, LSI Vol-5 part-2, dsal, 14,weblink "Western Maithili", Whether Bajjika is classified as a dialect of Maithili depends on whether 'Maithili' is understood as the term for the specific standard Maithili dialect spoken in northern Bihar, or as the name for the whole language as the group of all related dialects together. When the proponents of the Maithili language in Bihar demanded use of Maithili-medium primary education in the early 20th century, the Angika and Bajjika-speaking people did not support them, and instead favoured Hindi-medium education.{{sfn|Mithilesh Kumar Jha|2017|p=163}} The discussions around Bajjika's status as a minority language emerged in the 1950s.{{sfn|Abhishek Kashyap|2014|p=1}} In the 1960s and the 1970s, when the Maithili speakers demanded a separate Mithila state, the Angika and Bajjika speakers made counter-demands for recognition of their languages.{{sfn|Kathleen Kuiper|2010|p=57}}Maithili proponents believe that the Government of Bihar and the pro-Hindi Bihar Rashtrabhasha Parishad promoted Angika and Bajjika as distinct languages to weaken the Maithili language movement. {{sfn|Mithilesh Kumar Jha|2017|p=163}} People from mainly Maithil Brahmins and Karan Kayasthas castes supported the Maithili movement in the days when it was to be subsumed as a dialect of Hindi / Bengali, hence anti-Maithili factions branded the Maithili Language as a Brahminical language while inciting various other castes in the Mithila region to project Angika and Bajjika as their mother tongues, attempting to break away from the Maithili-based regional identity.{{sfn|Manish Kumar Thakur|2002|p=208}}According to linguist Pandit Rahul Sankrityayan, Bajjika and Maithili are two different dialects.BOOK,weblink Kalpanā, 1972, Bhāgīratha Śarmā, hi, BOOK, Śarmā, Śrīnivāsa,weblink Samakālīna ālocanā ke pratimāna, 1974, Maṇimaya Prakāśana, hi,

Academy

In a move aimed at protecting indigenous language and culture, the Bihar government has decided to set up two new academies to promote local dialects; Surjapuri and Bajjika, spoken in politically influential Seemanchal and Bajjikanchal regions of the state.WEB,weblink Outlook,

Films in Bajjika

Lakshmi Elthin Hammar Angna (2009) was the first formal feature film in Bajjika. Sajan Aiha Doli le ke came after that.NEWS,weblinkweblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20130512144105weblink">weblink dead, 12 May 2013, The Times of India, Bhojpuri artist to make first Bajjika film, 17 August 2009,

See also

References

{{reflist|30em}}

Bibliography

  • BOOK, Abhishek Kashyap, On the linguistic resources of Bajjika, Vibha Chauhan, The People's Linguistic Survey of India, 6: The Languages of Bihar, Orient Blackswan, 2014,weblink
  • BOOK, Abhishek Kumar Kashyap, The representation of gender in Bajjika grammar and discourse, Julie Abbou, Fabienne H. Baider, Gender, Language and the Periphery: Grammatical and social gender from the margins,weblink 2016, John Benjamins, 978-90-272-6683-5,
  • BOOK, Kathleen Kuiper, The Culture of India,weblink 2010, Rosen, 978-1-61530-149-2,
  • JOURNAL, Manish Kumar Thakur, The politics of minority languages: Some reflections on the Maithili language movement, Journal of Social and Economic Development, 4, 2, 2002, 199–212,weblink
  • BOOK, Mithilesh Kumar Jha, Language Politics and Public Sphere in North India: Making of the Maithili Movement,weblink 2017, Oxford University Press India, 978-0-19-909172-0,

Further reading

External links

  • weblink {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201102140727weblink |date=2020-11-02 }} Official Website of Bajjika Vikash Manch
{{Maithili language}}{{Bihari languages}}{{authority control}}

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