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  • Syrian Government Supports Academy That Teaches Historic Language Of

    SYRIAN GOVERNMENT SUPPORTS ACADEMY THAT TEACHES HISTORIC LANGUAGE OF CHRIST

    Irish Times
    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/world/20 09/0416/1224244810646.html
    Thursday, April 16, 2009

    ILYANA BARQIL wears skinny jeans, boots and a fur-lined jacket,
    handy for keeping out the cold in the Qalamoun mountains north
    of Damascus. She likes TV quiz shows and American films and enjoys
    swimming. But this thoroughly modern Syrian teenager is also learning
    Aramaic, the language spoken by Jesus.

    Ilyana (15) is part of a big effort to preserve and revive the world's
    oldest living tongue. Last November she started classes at the newly
    established Aramaic Language Academy in the picturesque village of
    Maaloula, where the residents speak more or less the same language
    as Galileans did 2,000 years ago.

    "My father speaks Aramaic but my mother doesn't as she's from Lebanon,"
    Ilyana says. "I want to be fluent. I don't know too much about the
    Aramaic language but I do know it's ancient."

    Aramaic is a Semitic tongue related to Hebrew and Arabic and
    was once the day-to-day language of parts of modern-day Syria and
    Israel. Christ's lament on the cross - "Eli, Eli, lama sabachtani?" (my
    God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?) - was uttered in Aramaic. The
    long decline of the language accelerated as the region opened up in
    the 1920s when the French colonial autho rities built a road from
    Damascus to Aleppo. Television and the internet, and youngsters
    leaving to work, reduced the number of speakers.

    Recognised by Unesco as a "definitely endangered" language, Aramaic
    is spoken by just 7,000 people in Maaloula, and about 8,000 in two
    nearby villages.

    But things are looking up, particularly since the University of
    Damascus founded its language academy, with government help. The
    facility has modern premises, a bank of PCs, new textbooks, a teaching
    staff of six and 85 students at three levels.

    "When I was at school over 30 years ago we were not allowed to speak
    Aramaic," says Mukhail Bkheil, standing behind the counter in Abu
    George's souvenir shop in Maaloula's main square. "Now, thanks to
    President Assad we even have an institute teaching it."

    Syria being Syria, there are political sensitivities, not least because
    "Arabisation" was a key feature of government education policy after
    the Baath party came to power in the 1960s.

    "In Syria there are a lot of minority groups - Circassians, Armenians,
    Kurds and Assyrians - so it's a big decision to allow the teaching
    of other languages in government schools," says Imad Reihan, a pillar
    of the Aramaic academy.

    "But the government is interested in promoting the Aramaic language
    because it goes back so deep into Syria's history .."

    Reihan and colleagues were delighted recently when a Unesco team
    visited, and they are now hoping for funds to allow them to collate
    the vanishing words into proper dictionaries.

    Improbably, Aramaic was given a boost by a Hollywood film - Mel
    Gibson's controversial Passion of the Christ , which was released in
    2004 before the academy was set up.

    Observers say the opening of the school indicates a more relaxed
    attitude by the regime. Considering the bitter enmity between
    Syria and Israel, which dispute sovereignty over the Golan Heights -
    declared an Israeli occupied territory by the UN - it is striking that
    Aramaic letters are so similar to the Hebrew of rabbinical texts -
    one reason, perhaps, why the only Aramaic sign in Maaloula is on the
    academy. "Otherwise people might think some buildings were Israeli
    settlements," jokes one visitor from Damascus.

    Linguists say Syria is doing well in fostering this heritage. "Aramaic
    is actually pretty healthy in Maaloula," said Prof Geoffrey Kahn, who
    teaches Semitic philology at Cambridge University. "It's the eastern
    Aramaic dialects in Turkey, Iraq and Iran that are really endangered."
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