United Nations (United States) (AFP) - There's Ojibwe in Canada, Ami in Australia and Ayapanec in Mexico: these are among the world's nearly 2,700 indigenous languages at risk of disappearing unless new initiatives are taken to revive them, UN officials say.
The United
Nations is hoping to raise awareness of the cultural loss with the launch this
week of the International Year of Indigenous Languages, a yearlong project to
help protect these ancient mother tongues.
"2019
must serve as a turning point in our collective determination to save
indigenous languages and those who speak them," Maria Fernanda Espinosa,
the president of the General Assembly, told a UN gathering on Friday.
Young
aborigines from Taiwan participate in a blessing ceremony at the Amerindian
village of Klahowya, British Columbia, Canada in September 2011 (AFP
Photo/
Laurent Vu The)
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Out of the
roughly 7,600 languages spoken worldwide, 2,680 indigenous languages are in
danger and many are disappearing at an alarming rate, according to UN
officials.
"Every
two weeks, there is an indigenous language that disappears, so it is a pretty
large toll indeed," said Ernesto Ottone-Ramirez, an assistant director at
the UN's cultural agency UNESCO.
In 2003,
the last fluent speaker of Akkala Saami, spoken in Russia's northern Kola
peninsula, died, a few years before Tefvic Esenc Eyak disappeared in 2008 with
the death of Marie Smith Jones in Alaska.
At a
ceremony in Paris this week, eight-year-old Odeskkun Thusky spoke in his native
Algonquin from Canada's First Nation regions in Quebec and Ontario.
"It's
important to speak this language because our language here is dying and we want
more people to speak it so our language doesn't die," Thusky told AFP.
Canada,
home to around 630 First Nation tribes comprising 1.4 million people, has
promised funds to help revitalize several languages.
In
Australia, more than 250 aboriginal languages were spoken when the British
first started to settle in 1788, but only around 120 are still spoken today.
In a bid to
hold on to them, some Northern Territory schools now provide education in both
English and an aboriginal language.
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