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By Tom Colls
Today programme
An estimated 7,000 languages are being spoken around the world. But that number
is expected to shrink rapidly in the coming decades. What is lost when a
language dies?
In 1992 a prominent US linguist stunned the academic world by predicting that
by the year 2100, 90% of the world's languages would have ceased to exist.
Far from inspiring the world to act, the issue is still on the margins,
according to prominent French linguist Claude Hagege.
"Most people are not at all interested in the death of languages," he says. "If
we are not cautious about the way English is progressing it may eventually kill
most other languages."
According to Ethnologue, a US organisation that compiles a global database of
languages, 473 languages are currently classified as endangered.
Among the ranks are the two known speakers of Lipan Apache alive in the US,
four speakers of Totoro in Colombia and the single Bikya speaker in Cameroon.
"It is difficult to provide an accurate count," says Ethnologue editor Paul
Lewis. "But we are at a tipping point. From here on we are going to
increasingly see the number of languages going down."
What is lost?
As globalisation sweeps around the world, it is perhaps natural that small
communities come out of their isolation and seek interaction with the wider
world. The number of languages may be an unhappy casualty, but why fight the
tide?
WAR OF WORDS
followed by Spanish (329 million speakers) and English (328 million speakers).
"What we lose is essentially an enormous cultural heritage, the way of
expressing the relationship with nature, with the world, between themselves in
the framework of their families, their kin people," says Mr Hagege.
"It's also the way they express their humour, their love, their life. It is a
testimony of human communities which is extremely precious, because it
expresses what other communities than ours in the modern industrialized world
are able to express."
For linguists like Claude Hagege, languages are not simply a collection of
words. They are living, breathing organisms holding the connections and
associations that define a culture. When a language becomes extinct, the
culture in which it lived is lost too.
Cross words
The value of language as a cultural artefact is difficult to dispute, but is it
actually realistic to ask small communities to retain their culture?
One linguist, Professor Salikoko Mufwene, of the University of Chicago, has
argued that the social and economic conditions among some groups of speakers
"have changed to points of no return".
As cultures evolve, he argues, groups often naturally shift their language use.
Asking them to hold onto languages they no longer want is more for the
linguists' sake than for the communities themselves.
Ethnologue editor Paul Lewis, however, argues that the stakes are much higher.
Because of the close links between language and identity, if people begin to
think of their language as useless, they see their identity as such as well.
This leads to social disruption, depression, suicide and drug use, he says. And
as parents no longer transmit language to their children, the connection
between children and grandparents is broken and traditional values are lost.
"There is a social and cultural ache that remains, where people for generations
realize they have lost something," he says.
What no-one disputes is that the demise of languages is not always the fault of
worldwide languages like our own.
An increasing number of communities are giving up their language by their own
choice, says Claude Hagege. Many believe that their languages have no future
and that their children will not acquire a professional qualification if they
teach them tribal languages.
"We can do nothing when the abandonment of a language corresponds to the will
of a population," he says.
Babbling away
Perhaps all is not lost for those who want the smaller languages to survive. As
the revival of Welsh in the UK and Maori in New Zealand suggest, a language can
be brought back from the brink.
Hebrew, says Claude Hagege, was a dead language at the beginning of the 19th
century. It existed as a scholarly written language, but there was no way to
say "I love you" and "pass the salt" - the French linguists' criteria for
detecting life.
But with the "strong will" of Israeli Jews, he says, the language was brought
back into everyday use. Now it is undeniably a living breathing language once
more.
Closer to home, Cornish intellectuals, inspired by the reintroduction of
Hebrew, succeeded in bringing the seemingly dead Cornish language back into use
in the 20th Century. In 2002 the government recognised it as a living minority
language.
But for many dwindling languages on the periphery of global culture, supported
by little but a few campaigning linguists, the size of the challenge can seem
insurmountable.
"You've got smallest, weakest, least resourced communities trying to address
the problem. And the larger communities are largely unaware of it," says
Ethnologue editor Paul Lewis.
"We would spend an awful lot of money to preserve a very old building, because
it is part of our heritage. These languages and cultures are equally part of
our heritage and merit preservation."