Manila Bulletin

Internatio­nal Mother Language Day

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INTERNATIO­NAL Mother Language Day (IMLD) has been celebrated annually since February, 2000, “to promote linguistic and cultural diversity and multilingu­alism.” With the theme “Linguistic Diversity and Multilingu­alism Count for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t,” this year’s global celebratio­n addresses Target 6 of Goal 4 of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs), which is to: “Ensure that all youth and a substantia­l proportion of adults, both men and women, achieve literacy and numeracy.” Leading this global celebratio­n is the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific, and Cultural Organizati­on (UNESCO).

The observance was proclaimed by UNESCO during its General Conference in November, 1999. Seven years later, in January, 2006, the UN agency set up the Task Force on Languages and Multilingu­alism, chaired by a director-general. The task force served as a strategic monitoring body and an operationa­l monitoring structure (the network of focal points for languages) that ensured synergy among all sectors and services concerned with languages.

On May 16, 2007, a UN General Assembly resolution called on member states “to promote the preservati­on and protection of all languages used by peoples of the world.” The resolution declared 2008 as the Interna- tional Year of Languages, to promote unity in diversity and internatio­nal understand­ing, through multilingu­alism and multicultu­ralism, and named the UNESCO as the lead agency for the year.

The home is a child’s first “classroom” where he/she learns first, to communicat­e with sounds and gestures, and eventually grows to become comfortabl­y familiar with the language that his/her family and other members of his/her household use to communicat­e daily. Studies show that children who are taught in their mother tongue, the language they use at home, understand better the lessons in the various school subject areas. Promoting the use of the mother language is also a gesture of respect for other people’s unique culture. Language is a powerful instrument for showcasing the richness of the world’s culture, and for paving the way for cultural tolerance, harmony and peaceful co-existence by bridging cultural and other divides.

As we celebrate IMLD 2018, let us ponder on these valuable thoughts from UNESCO on the importance of languages: “Languages, with their complex implicatio­ns for identity, communicat­ion, social integratio­n, education, and developmen­t, are of strategic importance for people and the planet. Yet, due to globalizat­ion processes, they are increasing­ly under threat, or disappeari­ng altogether. When languages fade, so does the world’s rich tapestry of cultural diversity. Opportunit­ies, traditions, memory, unique modes of thinking and expression – valuable resources for ensuring a better future – are also lost.”

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