UNESCO On-line
Atlas Seeks to Save Dying Languages
Paris,
March 20, (RHC).-
The United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) has launched an interactive
electronic version of its atlas
cataloguing some 2,500 endangered
languages worldwide. The updated
"Atlas of the World's Languages in
Danger of Disappearing" can
continually be supplemented,
corrected and updated based on user
contributions.
It ranks
the dying languages according to
five levels: unsafe, definitely
endangered, severely endangered,
critically endangered and extinct.
Data shows that out of the 6,000
languages currently in existence,
over 200 have died out over the last
three generations, 538 are
critically endangered, 502 severely
endangered, 632 definitely
endangered and 607 unsafe.
According to the Atlas, nearly 200
languages have fewer than 10
speakers and 178 others have between
10 and 50 speakers. The language of
Manx in the Isle of Man died out in
1974 when Ned Maddrell, the last
speaker, passed away while Eyak, in
Alaska, met its demise last year
with the death of Marie Smith Jones.
"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," said UNESCO
Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura.
More
than 30 linguists worked on the
Atlas, which highlights how the
phenomenon of disappearing languages
is evident in every region and in
varying economic conditions.
Nearly
one-third of all of the world's
languages are spoken in sub-Saharan
Africa, and it is estimate that ten
percent of them will disappear
during the course of the next
century. India, the U.S., Brazil,
Indonesia and Mexico are nations
with great linguistic diversity, but
also have the largest number of
endangered languages.
In
France, 13 languages are severely
endangered, eight definitely
endangered and five considered
unsafe. However, the situation of
languages is not equally dire
worldwide. For example, Papua New
Guinea, the most linguistically
diverse with over 800 languages
believed to be spoken there, has 88
-- relatively few -- endangered
languages.
Some
languages classified as extinct,
including Cornish in the United
Kingdom and Sîshëë in New Caledonia,
are being actively revitalized and
could potentially become living
languages again.