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last modified November 19, 2009 by EmilioCid
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Which is the language most important?
- The most important language is our mother tongue. It is our identity, our “SELF”. It was through our mother tongue that we´ve learned to think. If somebody tries to corrupt our language, he also tries to corrupt our identity.
In 100 years, 40% of the 6000 languages spoken in the world will be extinct, due to linguistic globalization and to the cultural invasion by languages of foreign powers. All nations that dominate other people, either militarily, economically or technologically, always try to impose their language. The old Romans already did this.
The smallest that a community might be, that speaks a language, we have to respect it, to preserve it from extinguishing and the exaggerated invasion of foreign words.
Let us imagine, for example, a small indian community that knows the medicinal property of a plant. If the language of this community disappears, together with it will disappear this important scientific knowledge
We, the speakers of the international planned language Esperanto, support all the efforts of the indian peoples to save its language and culture, since we think that all the languages and all the cultures have an intrinsic value that humanity should not lose.
The positive effectiveness of education in the mother tongue is proven in comparison with education only in languages that are not the mother tongue .
Which is the most spoken language in the world?
Many believe that it is English, but the most spoken language in the world is Mandarin (Chinese). Many people study English (without success), but the native speakers of English, represent only 6% of the world-wide population.
However, as they concentrate more than 50% of the wealth, English imposes as the international language to the remaining 94% of the world, placing us in an inferior situation with inequality and injustice.
But the of the business world already adopted English, because they think it is more practical.
It is not better to leave it how it is ?
The world also adopted transportation by fossil fuel because it´s more practical. Are you satisfied with the pollution and the traffic ?
In the matter oflanguage something similar is occuring.. We do not have to insist on the error, just because we have a fear of change.
England makes more profits by the English language, than with the exploration of oil of the North Sea.
Independently of what the great companies think, are you satisfied having to learn and to use the English language?
Watch the video “the Language Challenge:
The language challenge - El linguistic challenge - Le défi DES langues - sfida della There language - the linguistic challenge - تحدياللغةبواسطةكلودبيرون - Языковаяпроблема - lingva There defio - 面对现实 - Kielellinen haaste - Die Herausforderung der Sprachen - אתגרהשפהמאתקלודפירון - Językowe wyzwanie - भाषाओंकिचुनौती, क्लौडपएरोनकेसगं - nyelvi kihívás - 言語問題に挑む - Jazyková výzva - Tatizo there lugha - ความท้าทายทางภาษาโดยโคล้ดไพรอน - El challenges lingüístic - Jazyková výzva - Of oplossing van het Taalprobleem
See also:
International Languages and International Human Rights
by Prof. ROBERT PHILLIPSON
For a situation of EQUALITY and JUSTICE, we propose the use of the international language ESPERANTO.
Esperanto is an international and neutral language, that belong to no nation. It´s an efficient instrument for the preservation of all the languages and cultures of the globe.
The proposal of esperanto is that each people continues to speak its own mother language , and use the neutral language in the international communications.
To learn esperanto is 10 MORE EASIER and FASTER than to learn spanish, french, or any other natural language. Its grammar is simple and total regular, without exceptions.
The preliminary study of esperanto, helps the learning of other languages. This is a fact proved in experiences in European Universities. Who studied esperanto, learns other foreign languages easier.
Know more about ESPERANTO:
- Prague Manifesto - http://lingvo.org/
- Freedom for Languages - www.freedomforlanguages.cjb.net
- Documents of the FSM in some languages - www.parolumondo.com/forumo
- Le Monde Diplomatique en Esperanto http://eo.mondediplo.com
- Social World-wide Assembly http://mas-eo.org
- Declaration by the Esperanto Movement Regarding Indigenous Languages and Cultures
www.uea.org/vikio/Deklaro_Pri_Indigxenaj_Popoloj_En_La_Angla
Esperanto in the Fórum - day 31 of January of 2009
UFPA-Basic-Bb-B4-axle 5 - 8:30 h - 12:30 h
Freedom for the Languages
UFPA-Basic-Ob-THE-axle 1- 8:30 h - 18:30 h
Klubo Esperantista Zamenhof
tels. 91-8898-2419 or 91-8867-8700
ESPERANTO - DEUTSCH - ENGLISH - ESPAÑOL - FRANÇAIS - ITALIAN MAGYARUL - PORTUGUESE - NEDERLANDS - OCCITAN - CATALÀ
Prague Manifesto
We, members of the worldwide movement for the promotion of Esperanto, address this Manifesto to all governments, international organizations and people of good will; declare our unshakeable commitment to the objectives set out here; and call on all organizations and individuals to join us in working for these goals.
For more than a century Esperanto, which was launched in 1887 as a project for an auxiliary language for international communication and quickly developed into a rich living language in its own right, has functioned as a means of bringing people together across the barriers of language and culture. The aims that inspire the users of Esperanto are still as important and relevant as ever. Neither the worldwide use of a few national languages, nor advances in communications technology, nor the development of new methods of language teaching is likely to result in a fair and effective language order based on the following principles, which we hold to be essential.
DEMOCRACY Any system of communication which confers lifelong privileges on some while requiring others to devote years of effort to achieving a lesser degree of competence is fundamentally antidemocratic. While Esperanto, like any language, is not perfect, it far outstrips other languages as a means of egalitarian communication on a world scale.
We maintain that language inequality gives rise to communicative inequality at all levels, including the international level. We are a movement for democratic communication.
GLOBAL EDUCATION All ethnic languages are bound to certain cultures and nations. For example, the child who learns English learns about the culture, geography and political systems of the English-speaking world, primarily the United States and the United Kingdom. The child who learns Esperanto learns about a world without borders, where every country is home.
We maintain that education in any language is bound to a certain view of the world. We are a movement for global education.
EFFECTIVE EDUCATION Only a small percentage of foreign-language students attain fluency in the target language. In Esperanto, fluency is attainable even through home study. Various studies have shown that Esperanto is useful as a preparation for learning other languages. It has also been recommended as a core element in courses in language awareness.
We maintain that the difficulties in learning ethnic languages will always be a barrier for many students who would benefit from knowing a second language. We are a movement for effective language learning.
MULTILINGUALISM The Esperanto community is almost unique as a worldwide community whose members are universally bilingual or multilingual. Every member of the community has made the effort to learn at least one foreign language to a communicative level. In many cases this leads to a love and knowledge of several languages and to broader personal horizons in general.
We maintain that the speakers of all languages, large and small, should have a real chance of learning a second language to a high communicative level. We are a movement for providing that opportunity to all.
LANGUAGE RIGHTS The unequal distribution of power between languages is a recipe for permanent language insecurity, or outright language oppression, for a large part of the world's population. In the Esperanto community the speakers of languages large and small, official and unofficial meet on equal terms through a mutual willingness to compromise. This balance of language rights and responsibilities provides a benchmark for developing and judging other solutions to language inequality and conflict.
We maintain that the wide variations in power among languages undermine the guarantees, expressed in many international instruments, of equal treatment regardless of language. We are a movement for language rights.
LANGUAGE DIVERSITY National governments tend to treat the great diversity of languages in the world as a barrier to communication and development. In the Esperanto community, however, language diversity is experienced as a constant and indispensable source of enrichment. Consequently every language, like every biological species, is inherently valuable and worthy of protection and support.
We maintain that communication and development policies which are not based on respect and support for all languages amount to a death sentence for the majority of languages in the world. We are a movement for language diversity.
HUMAN EMANCIPATION Every language both liberates and imprisons its users, giving them the ability to communicate among themselves but barring them from communication with others. Designed as a universally accessible means of communication, Esperanto is one of the great functional projects for the emancipation of humankind -- one which aims to let every individual citizen participate fully in the human community, securely rooted in his or her local cultural and language identity yet not limited by it.
We maintain that exclusive reliance on national languages inevitably puts up barriers to the freedoms of expression, communication and association. We are a movement for human emancipation.