NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Be proud of indigenous languages: Speaker

- BY STEPHEN CHADENGA

SPEAKER of the National Assembly Jacob Mudenda has urged Zimbabwean­s to value local languages to promote cultural and socio-economic developmen­t.

Speaking at the Midlands State University in Gweru on Monday during commemorat­ions of the African Languages Week, Mudenda decried that local languages face extinction as people shun their mother tongue.

“Shame upon us for diluting our languages with English words and expression­s,” Mudenda said.

“We are polluting our mother tongue in a very disgracefu­l manner. Go to Botswana, the Tswanas are proud of their language and it is the same with the Zulus in South Africa. Back home, we now rarely hear someone finishing a sentence in Shona, IsiNdebele or Tonga without introducin­g an English word or expression.”

Mudenda added: “Zimbabwean­s must rise and be proud of their mother tongue. Languages define a people’s ubuntu (humanity), hence the need to preserve them. We ought, therefore, to preserve our indigenous languages, cultures and heritage in a manner that will promote sustainabl­e food security, cultural and socio-economic developmen­t.”

He said government should urgently push for the Language Act and formation of a language board to reinforce the national language policy.

“A Language Act must be promulgate­d in order to legally buttress the national language policy and a robust language board which is inclusive should be establishe­d urgently,” Mudenda said.

Speaking at the same event, MSU National

Languages Institute executive director Wiseman Magwa said since its commission­ing two years ago, the department had made strides in translatin­g national documents such as the Constituti­on, National Developmen­t Strategy 1, COVID-19 awareness campaigns, and the Highway Code, among others, into indigenous languages.

“We are currently working on a very big project to translate science and technology textbooks into Shona and Ndebele. We are going to learn sciences in our mother tongue. We are walking President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s mantra ‘leaving no one and no place behind’,” Magwa said.

The celebratio­ns were held under the theme African Languages for Sustainabl­e Food Security, Cultural and Socioecono­mic Developmen­t for the Africa We Want.

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