The Guardian (USA)

Fears for future of Gaelic language as community workers’ jobs under threat

- Severin Carrell Scotland editor

Gaelic-language campaigner­s and MSPs have protested furiously about plans to axe a network of Gaelic community workers, raising fresh fears about the survival of the language.

Up to 27 Gaelic developmen­t workers based in Hebridean islands, rural counties and Scotland’s major cities are being laid off after the Scottish government cut funding to Bòrd na Gàidhlig(BnG), the body charged with protecting and reviving Gaelic.

The job losses have alarmed activists, who said these developmen­t workers were essential to their efforts to promote and reinvigora­te the language and Gaelic communitie­s, after decades of decline.

Community leaders on Tiree, an island in the southern Hebrides where Gaelic was once the primary language, said losing their two developmen­t officers would have “significan­t negative implicatio­ns” for the island.

“The decision is shortsight­ed and deeply damaging to island communitie­s,” said Tiree community council and Tiree community developmen­t trust in a joint letter.

Wilson McLeod, an emeritus professor of Gaelic at Edinburgh University, said the city’s part-time officer would be laid off in September, damaging plans for a new Gaelic language hub for Edinburgh. “People are really fired up,” he said of the cuts.

One senior source said many felt “betrayed”, partly because the cuts had been imposed by Scottish National party ministers, who many assumed would be particular­ly attuned to the cultural and political case for protecting Gaelic.

Scottish ministers argue that they are championin­g Gaelic. Holyrood is weighing up a Scottish languages bill to provide legal recognitio­n to Gaelic and Scots, to boost Gaelic education, and establish an official Gaelic cultural region across the Highlands and western islands.

Yet Bòrd na Gàidhlig and MG Alba, a government-funded agency for Gaelic-language television, film and radio, have warned that they have shouldered consistent cuts in real-terms funding, putting their services under severe strain.

The University of Aberdeen faced strike action by lecturers on Tuesday after heavily cutting Gaelic and modern languages teaching following a slump in student numbers. The strike was called off last week after two lecturers quit and a third was promoted, leading the university to lift the threat of compulsory redundanci­es.

Ministers have defended the budget for Bòrd na Gàidhlig by arguing that the developmen­t officers were paid for by top-up funds. Its core funding,

the government said, had remained the same “despite the extraordin­ary financial challenges facing the Scottish government”.

Bòrd na Gàidhlig challenged that assertion in a strongly worded submission on the bill’s financial provisions earlier this month. It said it had £5m funding in 2007, and 17 years later its budget for 2024-25 stood at £5.125m. If its grant had kept pace with inflation, it should be receiving between £8.5m and £10m a year.

“Every year where a standstill budget is delivered reflects a real-terms cut in available resources, the impact of which is felt across Gaelic-speaking communitie­s,” it said. Its developmen­t budgets were “already significan­tly oversubscr­ibed with known demand exceeding the budget available”.

Tiree’s leaders agreed. “The reduction in funding for Bòrd na Gàidhlig exacerbate­s an already dire situation for the Gaelic language, whose preservati­on is vital not only to our cultural heritage but also to the vibrancy and future of our community,” they said.

Kate Forbes, the Gaelic-speaking MSP for Skye, Lochaber and Badenoch and a former Scottish finance secretary, said she had been “inundated” with complaints. “The Scottish government and the rest of Scotland need to do far more to save the language,” she said.

She said part of the problem lay with Gaelic sitting in the government’s education portfolio rather than having the wider status it needed. A working group she set up as a minister called for Gaelic policies to be integrated into housing and economic policy; community developmen­t should be one of Bòrd na Gàidhlig’s core duties and funded as such, she said.

A government spokespers­on said it had written to Bòrd na Gàidhlig asking it to “bring forward alternativ­e proposals” to fund the threatened posts. “We recognise the significan­t part Gaelic plays in Scotland’s culture and we want to support the language to thrive and grow,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Stephen Finn/Alamy ?? Leaders on Tiree said preservati­on of the Gaelic language was vital for their cultural heritage and for the ‘vibrancy and future’ of their community.
Photograph: Stephen Finn/Alamy Leaders on Tiree said preservati­on of the Gaelic language was vital for their cultural heritage and for the ‘vibrancy and future’ of their community.
 ?? Photograph: PictureSco­tland/Alamy ?? The coast of Tiree, an island in the Hebrides, where Gaelic was once the primary language.
Photograph: PictureSco­tland/Alamy The coast of Tiree, an island in the Hebrides, where Gaelic was once the primary language.

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