In addition to the killings by Indian security forces, Chinnaswamy, Muthu, Ranganathan, Sarangapani, Sivalingam and Veerappan poured petrol (gasoline) over their bodies and burned themselves to death in protest of Hindi imposition Self-immolation of Tamilians in order to oppose Hindi imposition. (Such an act is called self-immolation.) The situation was so volatile, people's feelings against Hindi imposition were so strong that even the presence of large contingents of Indian security forces massed into Tamil Nadu and their ruthless shootings of unarmed demonstrators did not stop the common people (especially students) from continuing with the demonstrations against Hindi imposition. Senior politicians of the ruling Congress Party in Tamil Nadu and in New Delhi promised that Hindi would not be imposed, and the agitation ended in mid-February 1965. But the "promises of no Hindi imposition" made to end the agitation were not fulfilled. All the sacrifices Tamils made during the agitation (some 500 killed, couple of thousand maimed and many more wounded) did not buy anything but those empty promises.
There was another Tamil Nadu Students Agitation against Hindi imposition in 1968. This agitation was minor compared to the 1965 agitation, primarily because the newly elected DMK Government of Tamil Nadu State (that came to power in early 1967) immediately met with student leaders and promised that it would see to it that Hindi is not imposed. This promise amounted to nothing either. There was nothing the state government of Tamil Nadu could do to stop Hindi imposition; the power rested and rests with the Indian government and it is dominated by politicians from the Hindi belt. So, in spite of the promises, Hindi imposition continued and continues to this day Article by a Tamilian in Delhi, illustrating that Hindi imposition continues to this day.
However, because of such agitations, no Indian language is able to overtake English in educational or business usage.
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It uses material from the
"Anti-Hindi agitations".
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