Categories: International

China's education policy in Inner Mongolia branded as an assault on culture

Beijing [China] September 28 (ANI): Authorities in China have completed the rollout of a controversial language reform in Inner Mongolia, requiring Mandarin to be the central language of instruction in schools. The shift, first introduced in 2020 and now fully enforced, has left many ethnic Mongolians fearing the erosion of their mother tongue, culture, and identity, as reported by The Epoch Times.

According to The Epoch Times, under the policy, nearly all subjects, including mathematics, history, and politics, must now be taught in Mandarin, leaving Mongolian reduced to a single language course.

Teachers who once instructed in Mongolian have either been reassigned or pushed into intensive retraining programs to adapt to the new mandate. Saren, a primary school teacher, said the abrupt change has been difficult. “I taught math in Mongolia for over a decade. Since last fall, I’ve had to switch completely to Mandarin. The training was rushed, and many of us are struggling. It’s even harder for the students.”

Other educators have noticed the impact on children’s academic performance. At a school in Ordos, teacher Naren-Gowa observed that pupils who previously excelled suddenly saw their grades fall after the transition. Parents share similar concerns. “If textbooks in Mandarin are used from first grade, our mother tongue will slowly vanish. And if our language disappears, so will our ethnic identity,” said Adma, a parent from Hulun Buir, as cited by The Epoch Times.

The effects of the policy extend beyond schools. Ethnic Mongolian civil servants are now expected to use Mandarin in all public duties; this environment discourages them from speaking Mongolian, even among friends and colleagues, as they fear being perceived as “backward or incompetent.”

Some teachers also report feeling isolated at work. With staff offices now mixed to encourage integration, one said a colleague warned against using Mongolian at all. “I felt like a stranger in my own workplace,” the teacher recalled. For many in Inner Mongolia, the concern is not only the diminishing use of their language but the gradual disappearance of their cultural heritage, a fear that continues to deepen under the Mandarin-only directive, as reported by The Epoch Times. (ANI)

Source

The article has been published through a syndicated feed. Except for the headline, the content has been published verbatim. Liability lies with original publisher.

Indianews syndication

Recent Posts

Journalists find love amid chaos of conflict in 'Birds of War'

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Journalist Janay Boulos first connected with Syrian cameraman Abd Alkader…

8 minutes ago

From Three Days of Chaos to Five Minutes of Done: The New Way India Moves

Amit Kumar Agarwal, cofounder and CEO of NoBroker Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], June 30: Not very…

23 minutes ago

Vinit Mobile Limited SME IPO Open for Subscription, Looks to Raise Rs. 34.13 Crores

Surat (Gujarat) [India], June 30: Vinit Mobile Limited, a growing multi-brand mobile retail company, has…

1 hour ago

UnClaimedX Unveils Pass Down to Tackle India’s Silent Inheritance Crisis

Bengaluru (Karnataka) [India], June 29:More than ₹1.84 lakh crore worth of financial assets remained unclaimed…

6 hours ago