Zoho founder Sridhar Vembu triggers online outrage, says Bengaluru residents not learning Kannada is ‘disrespectful’

Zoho founder Sridhar Vembu triggers online outrage, says Bengaluru residents not learning Kannada is ‘disrespectful’

Zoho founder Sridhar Vembu triggers online outrage, says Bengaluru residents not learning Kannada is ‘disrespectful’

The debate regarding locals in Bengaluru—politicians and autorickshaw drivers alike—for non-Kannada speakers to learn the local language got a lease of life, this time from a software development veteran. Sridhar Vembu, the founder and CEO of IT services giant Zoho, took to social media platform X, urging anyone who considers the city their home to learn to speak Kannada. 

Vembu remarked that it was “disrespectful” to not learn the language, triggering stark reaction online. However, the Zoho CEO’s own comment was a response to a photo post featuring two people sporting T-shirts with the words “Hindi National Language” on them, captioned, “Perfect T-shirt for Bangalore trip.” 

“If you make Bengaluru your home, you should learn Kannada, and your kids should learn Kannada. Not doing so after living many years in Bengaluru is disrespectful. I often request our employees in Chennai coming from other states to make an effort to learn Tamil after they come here,” read Vembu’s response.

A Mumbai-based user did not waste much time and hit back, “I have many Kannada friends in Mumbai, living here for decades. No one can speak Marathi. Not one word. Fair?” Similar incidents of Marathi imposition were recently reported in various regions in Maharashtra, but they seldom got any steam due to the melting pot nature of Mumbai. 

Similarly, Bengaluru has recently garnered a reputation as a new hub for people to move from different parts of the country, with new IT-based roles emerging due to the explosion of the startup ecosystem. 

Users even suggested entrance tests in Kannada, albeit on a lighter note. “Great Sir. Let’s divide the country and make borders with the requirement of an IELTS kind certificate in the local language for entrance. Just before that, the tagline of our country, ‘Unity in diversity’, should be immersed in Ganga in Varanasi,” responded one person.

Others were very blunt and said the IT services company founder sounded “immature”. They wrote on X, “You sound immature here. Being Disrespectful for any language, culture is unacceptable but not learning a language is being disrespectful? Logic dies there.”