I'm confused. How will the Irish language be lost if it's not officially recognised in Northern Ireland?
The language will not be lost if it is not officially recognised in the North. However, would you agree the language is disappearing and is being used less and less?
Making the language more widespread would promote and help strengthen it.
Irish is officially the first language of the Republic of Ireland - it's in the Constitution. It is already protected. Are we going over old ground here?
All conversations go around and around. Sometimes old topics need to be brought up and talked about again, to see if they remain relevant.
I think that is the wrong question, unless you believe that the ONLY way to avoid losing the language is to give it official status..
I do not believe that it is the only way, but I believe it could be one way, to help save the language.
Otherwise a more relevant and real world question is:
"There is a certain amount of money available. What is the best way to use our limited resources with the intention of preserving the language?"
To which I am absolutely certain that the answer is not:
"Give it official status and send millions of leaflets/froms in Irish to people who have no interest in that language whatsoever."
I work for the govenment, believe me I know what waste is about. In a perfect world there would be unlimited funds to protect all peoples from all harm.
If the language was to become the official one in the north, then it would be taught at schools. A whole new generation would be exposed to the language. Who knows, there could be a budding Gaelic poet out there, just waiting to hear those first few words. Pie in the sky stuff really, but you have to be in it to win it.
Interesting discussion - thanks folks..
We are not worthy!
Thanks for the answer but this doesn't really answer my question about which culture and why that particular culture.
Why is some point "800 years ago" the point at which you've decided a certain "culture" (which you haven't described) should be "kept alive"? (I'd also argue that the idea of making dual language a law will not keep anything from 800 years ago alive.)
I'm sorry if I have sounded vague.
800 years is not a time I just made up. It's more a term of reference used by some people when describing a particule time in Irish history. It would be like saying the 100 hundred year war. People will want to dispute where which event really started or ended, so it becomes a term.
I am describing Irish culture, which has\is been effected by serveral invasions, by the Norman/French/English.
I am trying to remain vague to some degree, because I don't really want to debate the facts and figures of what one event or another did or did not happen occording which version of history you beleive in. That is for another thread entirely.
I guess if you want to look at from an evolutionally point of veiw, we could describe English as overtaking Irish as a spoken language. If that language dies, then that is the natural order of things. However perhaps we could try to change this.
I was hoping to promote the Irish langauge. That was my only intent. To some degree I have succedded. I have also learnt that I should phrase my threads better, because being flippant causes one hell of a hoo-har.
I was only quoting yourself Simon from a few posts previously:
"I am just sadded to see the passing of any language"
"I ask you what price do we place on a lost language?"
In 1999, the languages services of the EU cost €686 million - a not inconsiderable amount of money - mostly wasted.
Half that money would be far better spent on promoting the various "smaller" languages, if that were the intention of making them "official".
And I shudder to think what that cost has risen to since 1999.
I beleive I have answered your enquires above. Feel free to ask me anything again, if you feel I have not and I'll have another go at it.
E.T.A. (goes for the cheap shot) Nice bit of Irish in this weeks comments from Randi.
(When you guys have finished throwing things at me, I'll come back out)