"Yes," said HRD Minister Smriti Irani in a written reply in Lok Sabha on whether the government is taking steps to popularise Sanskrit language in schools abroad.
As on January this year, 197 schools in 24 countries where there is a presence of Indian diaspora are affiliated to CBSE, she said.
Irani, who replaced German with Sanskrit as the third language in Kendriya Vidyalayas recently in a controversial move, said CBSE has already implemented communicative courses in teaching of Sanskrit at secondary level and two courses -- Sanskrit core and Sanskrit elective -- at senior secondary level.
CBSE has also brought out a booklet on 'collection of aphorisms on leadership from classical Indian literature' for the benefit of students.
It would be studied throughout schooling as the nature of this booklet is perennial and general, she said.
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