Dear David,
Mille grazie! Due to bad back problems I have not been able to to go to the library to get the article. 
I think Professor Smith's interpretation is very convincing. Smith has written about heresies earlier: see "The Early Heresies in the Development of Indian Religion"
in Indologica Taurinensia 2 (1974, 149-198, "Addendum to the Early Heresies" Indologica Taurinensia 5 (1977) , 177-178.
Best regards to all
Stella
P.S. For an (almost) complete bibliography of Professor Smith's many (very original) publications see Corolla Torontonensis. Studies in 
Honour of Ronald Morton Smith, edited by Emmet Robbins and Stella Sandahl, TSAR publications Toronto 1994, pp.xiii-xix.

Professor Stella Sandahl (emerita)
Department of East Asian Studies
130 St. George St. room 14087
Toronto, ON M5S 3H1
stella.sandahl@gmail.com
ssandahl@sympatico.ca
Tel. (416) 530-7755
Fax. (416) 978-5711


On Apr 12, 2017, at 1:17 PM, David and Nancy Reigle <dnreigle@gmail.com> wrote:

The article that Stella referred to seemed to be of interest to several people here (including myself). I have now gotten to a library and photocopied it. A scan of it in PDF is attached.

Best regards,

David Reigle
Colorado, U.S.A.

On Mon, Mar 20, 2017 at 12:54 PM, Stella Sandahl via INDOLOGY <indology@list.indology.info> wrote:
I cannot provide the article right now, but the point Prof. Smith was making  was that
the Buddha wasn't talking about languages at all. He was mainly saying the his disciples and followers should
render his words as they were spoken by him and refrain from all interpretations, additions, 'explanations'  etc.
It is quite a sensible point in my view. And it makes all discussion about what language the Buddha himself actually
spoke rather irrelevant, however interesting per se.
Best
Stella Sandahl
P.S. I'll get the article in question when I can go in to the library.

On Mar 20, 2017, at 3:23 AM, Matthew Kapstein <mkapstei@uchicago.edu> wrote:

Might anyone be able to share a pdf of the article mentioned by Prof. Sandahl?

with thanks as ever,
Matthew

Matthew Kapstein
Directeur d'études,
Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes

Numata Visiting Professor of Buddhist Studies,
The University of Chicago

________________________________________
From: Stella Sandahl [stella.sandahl@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, March 17, 2017 5:29 AM
To: alakendu das
Cc: Matthew Kapstein; indology@list.indology.info
Subject: Re: [INDOLOGY]  quote search

The most original interpretation of this famous passage is by the late Ronald Morton Smith.
"What Was One's Own Language? Vinaya 2.139". The article can be found in
Contacts between Cultures: South Asia 2 (Selected Papers  from the 33rd International Congress
of Asian and North African  Studies (Toronto, Aigust 15-25, 1990). Ed. by  K.L. Koppedrayer,
Lewiston 1992, pp, 240-241

Best regards to all
Stella Sandahl
University of Toronto


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<what_was_one's_own_language,_smith_1992.pdf>

--

andhaµ tama˙ pravißanti ye ‘vidyåm upåsate tato bhËya iva te tamo ya u vidyåyåµ ratå˙ ||

B®hadåraˆyaka Upanisad IV.4.10

“Those who worship ignorance enter into blind darkness.  Those who are devoted to knowledge enter, as it were, into a greater darkness.”