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Commemoration
of International Mother Language Day
CHIPAWO
March 12, 2010
In this age of globalisation
and especially for us here in Africa, as a children's arts education
and culture organisation, CHIPAWO attaches importance to the efforts
to promote and develop mother tongue expression.
CHIPAWO has been commemorating
International Mother Language Day for a number of years. 21st February
is International Mother Language Day and this year the commemoration
will take place at St Michael's School in Mbare, Harare, on Saturday,
13th March, starting at 10am. All who wish to join in celebrating
and paying respect to a child's right to use his or her mother tongue
freely, are welcome to attend.
Those who are too far
away to come are asked simply to note the importance of mother tongue
and the need to promote and develop it in Zimbabwe.
International Mother
Language Day was adopted by the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) in November 1999 and it recognises
that "promoting linguistic diversity and multilingual education
and ensuring that these languages can continue in use alongside
the major international languages of communication is a genuine
challenge to countries worldwide."
Performing on the programme
in Mbare on Saturday will be CHIPAWO's arts education centres in
Harare, Chitungwiza, Norton and Bindura. They will perform songs,
poems and drama in the mother tongue, including Shona, Ndebele,
Nyanja, and Ndau.
A message on Mother Language
will be read out to them and children and others invited to the
events will then hold discussions on the theme.
The world's nearly 6,000
languages were celebrated on International Mother Language Day this
year. According to Resolution 12 of UNESCO's 30th General Conference
there's a need to recognise the great importance of safeguarding
the linguistic and cultural heritage of humanity and extending the
influence of each of the cultures and languages of which that heritage
is composed, and considering the current threat to linguistic diversity
posed by the globalisation of communication and the tendency to
use a single language, at the risk of marginalizing the other major
languages of the world, or even of causing the lesser-used languages,
including regional languages, to disappear."
UNESCO's declaration
of 21st February as the International Mother Language Day was inspired
by the Bangladesh Language Movement's protest on 21st February 1952
against the imposition of Urdu as the state language when the troops
of the government opened fire on the unarmed demonstrators, most
of whom were students. With the declaration of 21st February as
the International Mother Language Day, the day has transcended the
national borders of Bangladesh and acquired an international significance
and a global dimension.
'Is technology friend
or foe when it comes to preserving local languages?' That was one
of the questions posed as part of a two-day event to mark the 11th
International Mother Language Day (IMLD). This year it is celebrated
as part of the 2010 - International Year for the Rapprochement of
Cultures. According to UNESCO, IMLD grows in importance each year
with more and more countries organizing educational and cultural
events.
Visit the CHIPAWO
fact
sheet
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