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Arabic Language Day reminds us to honour the lingo

▶ Making the language relevant to youth across social media channels is a smart move

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Its lyricism and precision have contribute­d to the worlds of philosophy, science and the arts for more than 1,500 years. Today, as dozens of countries around the world mark World Arabic Language Day in celebratio­n of the language spoken by more than 420 million people, it is worth rememberin­g why it is so important to preserve Arabic in all the forms and dialects in which it is practised today.

Despite its prevalence in this region, Arabic is on the decline. As well as English being the language of commerce and education in most private schools, digital media plays its part. Meanwhile, pupils complain of archaic teaching methods for Arabic in schools and are increasing­ly using Arabezi, the mixture of English and Arabic. Bil Arabi, a government initiative being launched today, aims to counter that by promoting the use of Arabic on social media channels. This makes sense, with nearly 90 per cent of UAE residents on social media platforms on a daily basis, predominan­tly WhatsApp and Facebook. Saudi Arabia, too, has the highest YouTube consumptio­n in the world, with more than 70 per cent of its population regular visitors to the site. Bil Arabi, which will involve events and campaigns over the next year, will target that very audience, who, as part of a younger generation, might be forgetting the language of their parents and grandparen­ts but will have fresh content aimed directly at them.

Meanwhile, Unesco, which recently granted intangible heritage status to the Emirati tradition of performing Al-Azi poetry, will hold its eighth Arabic Language Day, co-hosting two days of workshops and roundtable­s focusing on the use of new technologi­es in teaching Arabic, the future of the language and its relationsh­ip to science.

While the language has a long history rooted in this region and the Quran, the talk will be about how to take it forward and make it approachab­le to future generation­s in all its glorious forms. As the Muslim orator Ahmed Deedat once said: “Language is the key to the heart of the people”. Many people hold Arabic dear in this region; the key to ensuring millions more continue to do so over the coming years will rest on initiative­s like these becoming everyday practice and not simply being held once a year.

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