New edition of UNESCO's Atlas to celebrate Mother
Tongue Day:
World's languages in danger
UNESCO launched the electronic version of the new edition of its
Atlas of the World's Languages in Danger on 19 February.
This interactive digital t ool provides updated data about
approximately 2,500 endangered languages around the world and can be
continually supplemented, corrected and updated, thanks to contributions
from its users.
The Atlas, presented on the eve of International Mother Language Day
(21 February), enables searches according to several criteria, and ranks
the 2,500 endangered languages that are listed according to five
different levels of vitality: unsafe, definitely endangered, severely
endangered, critically endangered and extinct.
Some of the data are especially worrying: out of the approximately
6,000 existing languages in the world, more than 200 have become extinct
during the last three generations, 538 are critically endangered, 502
severely endangered, 632 definitely endangered and 607 unsafe.
For example, the Atlas states that 199 languages have fewer than ten
speakers and 178 others have 10 to 50. Among the languages that have
recently become extinct, it mentions Manx (Isle of Man), which died out
in 1974 when Ned Maddrell fell forever silent, Aasax (Tanzania), which
disappeared in 1976, Ubykh (Turkey) in 1992 with the demise of Tevfik
Esenç, and Eyak (Alaska, United States of America), in 2008 with the
death of Marie Smith Jones.
As UNESCO Director-General Koichiro Matsuura stressed, "The death of
a language leads to the disappearance of many forms of intangible
cultural heritage, especially the invaluable heritage of traditions and
oral expressions of the community that spoke it - from poems and legends
to proverbs and jokes. The loss of languages is also detrimental to
humanity's grasp of biodiversity, as they transmit much knowledge about
the nature and the universe." The work carried out by more than 30
linguists who worked together on the Atlas shows that the phenomenon of
disappearing languages appears in every region and in very variable
economic conditions. In Sub-Saharan Africa, where approximately 2,000
languages are spoken (nearly one third of the world total), it is very
probable that at least 10% of them will disappear in the next hundred
years. The Atlas furthermore establishes that India, the United States,
Brazil, Indonesia and Mexico, countries that have great linguistic
diversity, are also those which have the greatest number of endangered
languages. In Australia, 108 languages are in various degrees of danger.
In metropolitan France, 26 languages are endangered: 13 severely
endangered, 8 definitely endangered and 5 unsafe.
However, the situation presented in the Atlas is not universally
alarming.
Thus, Papua New Guinea, the country which has the greatest linguistic
diversity on the planet (more than 800 languages are believed to be
spoken there), also has relatively few endangered languages (88).
Certain languages that are shown as extinct in the Atlas are being
actively revitalized, like Cornish (Cornwall) and Sishcc (New
Caledonia), and it is possible that they will become living languages
again.
Furthermore, thanks to favourable linguistic policies, there has been
an increase in the number of speakers of several indigenous languages.
It is the case for Central Aymara and Quechua in Peru, Maori in New
Zealand, Guarani in Paraguay and several languages in Canada, the United
States and Mexico. The Atlas also shows that due to economic factors,
different linguistic policies and sociological phenomena, a given
language may have varying degrees of vitality in different countries.
For Christopher Moseley, an Australian linguist and editor-in-chief
of the Atlas, "It would be naive and oversimplifying to say that the big
ex-colonial languages, English, or French or Spanish, are the killers,
and all smaller languages are the victims. It is not like that; there is
a subtle interplay of forces, and this Atlas will help ordinary people
to understand those forces better."
The creation of this interactive Atlas, made possible with financial
assistance from Norway, is part of the UNESCO programme for safeguarding
endangered languages. Acting as a clearing house, the Organisation
facilitates access to available data and maps, and serves as a forum for
debate that is open to communities, specialists and national
authorities.
Courtesy:www.unesco.org
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