Sixty Languages at Risk of Extinction in Mexico—Can They Be Kept Alive?
Online dictionaries and smartphones may help with preservation, experts say.
PHOTOGRAPH BY LYNN JOHNSON, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Published April 10, 2014
Of the 143 native languages in Mexico, 60 are at risk of being silenced forever, linguists say.
One language, Ayapenaco, is spoken fluently by just two elderly men who aren't even on speaking terms. Another indigenous language, Kiliwa, is spoken by only 36 people.
While 60 of Mexico's native tongues are at risk, 21 are critically endangered, with only a few elderly speakers left, according to a statement released recently by Mexico's Centre of Research and Higher Studies in Social Anthropology (CIESAS). (Read about vanishing languages in National Geographic magazine.)
The languages most at risk in Mexico—including the Zapotec,
the Chatino, and the Seri tongues—are undergoing "rapid change" for a
number of reasons, says Lourdes de León Pasquel,
a linguist at CIESAS. Among them are "migration, social instability,
[and] economic and ideological factors that push speakers to adopt
Spanish."
Mexico isn't the only country losing its voices: If nothing
is done, about half of the 6,000-plus languages spoken today will
disappear by the end of this century, according to UNESCO's Endangered Languages Programme website.
It's vital to save languages because they "are the primary conduit for human culture," says K. David Harrison, a linguist and co-leader of National Geographic's Enduring Voices project.
Mexico is a good example of that, Harrison said in an email
interview: "Each of the Mexican indigenous languages contains millennia
of human experience, wisdom, and practical knowledge about the natural
environment."
León Pasquel argues that to preserve Mexico's threatened
languages, "there should be an integrated policy to keep them alive:
bilingual education [and] design of school curricula and bilingual
materials. But more importantly, teacher training is basic to achieve
this goal and that is what we lack."
Because Spanish is the dominant language in the workplace
and Mexicans are typically taught Spanish in school, many Mexicans may
have less interest in their region's native tongue, she said. But in her
view, "Everybody should learn an indigenous language apart from
Spanish."
PHOTOGRAPH BY LYNN JOHNSON, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Keeping Voices Alive
Losing languages is "neither inevitable nor irreversible,"
according to UNESCO's Endangered Languages website. There are many
efforts under way worldwide to boost learning and speaking of languages
in decline, especially for younger generations.
"Mexico is indeed home to many endangered languages, but
also to many language-revitalization efforts—for example, among the
Zapotec and Chatino communities in Oaxaca, and the Seri," Harrison said.
For instance, Harrison has been working with a team of linguists, partially sponsored by National Geographic, to build a talking dictionary for Zapotec speakers in the Tlacolula Valley.
"The Tlacolula Zapotec are a rural, agrarian community, but
they are quickly crossing the digital divide, and eager to create
digital tools and resources for their language," Harrison said. (See "'English Goes in One Ear and Out Another': An Endangered Language Perspective.")
Listen to some Zapotec phrases:
Harrison said he considers the Zapotec speakers "a great
example of how endangered language communities are leveraging new
technologies—especially smartphones—to maintain their heritage
languages."
León Pasquel agreed that new communication technology can
help keep languages going. For instance, adding language-specific
buttons to keypads on cell phones and computers would be a "great
support" to people who speak these endangered tongues, she said.
PHOTOGRAPH BY LYNN JOHNSON, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
Language Barriers
Linguistic anthropologist Susan D. Penfield works with the
Endangered Languages Project, an online resource for vanishing
languages. Because the world is interconnected like never before, she
says, more people are exposed to and speaking the globe's dominant
languages: Mandarin Chinese, English, and Spanish.
"Of the 2,000 or so African languages, most are
endangered," she said in an email interview. "Mexico is no more
susceptible than anywhere else impacted by globalization."
Penfield is convinced that "in most communities, there is a
desire to slow the process of loss, and revitalize" threatened native
languages. "There has been some remarkable success with this," she said.
"But it is an uphill battle."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment-- or suggestions, particularly of topics and places you'd like to see covered