Is it really such a great sin for someone to ask if people are willing to help by providing solutions in other programming languages without a Minimal, Complete and Verifiable example for each language?
Yes, it is. However, I want to talk about the hyperbole with regard to "such a great sin".
Closing a question is not a moral issue. It's a simple, practical one: does it fit the criteria for being on this site. Note that the criteria is not "can I answer it". We have set standards for what is allowed on this site, and questions which are outside of those standards should be closed.
Remember what the purpose of Stack Overflow is: to build and maintain a searchable database of problems and their solutions.
Let's say that you are a C++ programmer and you want have the same problem as the OP in this example. So you do a Google search for "C++ find last date of year". If you see a link to "Find last date of year in stata", are you going to click on it?
No. Because that question is about Stata, not C++. There is no reason to expect that link to contain an answer in C++, since that is not what the title says. So a C++ programmer will miss information that could have been useful to them because it was mis-categorized.
This is (part of) why Too Broad questions are not allowed. A broad question is so far removed from a specific problem that Google or other search engines are highly unlikely to ever find it if someone has a problem that would be solved by it. So any answers may help the OP, but are unlikely to help anybody else. Questions like these don't help build a searchable database of problems and solutions; they only help the OP.
We only want questions on this site that help us build a searchable database of problems and solutions.
Is it really valid for some people to down vote a legit and helpful answer because they obviously deem the question as too broad?
"Valid"? Not really. I mean, some people will stretch the meaning of "not useful" to include "the placement of this answer on a poor question means that it will never be seen by people who need the answer and thus is a priori 'not useful' " or somesuch, but I've never found such arguments convincing.
That being said, such people still exist. They find the counter-arguments to their perspective as unconvincing as I find their arguments. And thus, they will still downvote such answers. And there's nothing you can do to stop them.
Ultimately, voting expresses an opinion.