Updated On: 05 May, 2025 02:55 PM IST | Mumbai | Dipti Singh
Despite classical language status for Marathi, schools in the medium are worried about fast falling admissions amidst lack of govt support. Even as Marathi was recently conferred the prestigious status of an Abhijaat Bhasha (classical language), the possible closure of Dadar’s Nabar Guruji Vidyalaya, one of Mumbai’s oldest Marathi-medium schools

The Nabar Guruji Vidyalaya, which is run by the Indian Education Society, in Dadar. Pic/By Special Arrangement
Even as Marathi was recently conferred the prestigious status of an Abhijaat Bhasha (classical language), the possible closure of Dadar’s Nabar Guruji Vidyalaya, one of Mumbai’s oldest Marathi-medium schools, has reignited concerns about the fading presence of institutions imparting education in the regional tongue in the city.
Run by the Indian Education Society (IES), the Nabar Guruji Vidyalaya, an institution with a proud legacy dating back to the 1940s, is now staring at an uncertain future. News of its potential shutdown raises a difficult but urgent question: Is the decline of Marathi-medium schools in Maharashtra accelerating toward a point of no return?