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ANKARA: 15 Languages Endangered

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  • ANKARA: 15 Languages Endangered

    15 LANGUAGES ENDANGERED

    Hurriyet
    Feb 25 2009
    Turkey

    ISTANBUL - Three languages in Turkey have slipped into extinction and
    15 more are on the endangered list. The latest edition of the "Atlas
    of the World's Languages in Danger," published by The United Nations'
    Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO, has
    shown that 15 languages in Turkey are in danger of becoming extinct.

    According to research carried out by UNESCO on International Mother
    Language Day on Feb.21, half of the 6,700 languages spoken today
    are in danger of disappearing before the century ends. The recent
    publication of the "Atlas of the World's languages in Danger" aims
    to encourage governments and speaker communities to take action in
    order to slow the process at which these languages are disappearing.

    In the Atlas, UNESCO explained the rate of language endangerment in
    five different categories, unsafe, definitely endangered, severely
    endangered, critically endangered and extinct. The Atlas showed
    that while 15 languages in Turkey were in danger, three had become
    completely extinct. The extinct languages include Cappadocian Greek,
    which is extinct in Turkey and critically endangered worldwide,
    Mlahso, a language spoken in the Lice district of the eastern
    province Diyarbakır, which became extinct when its last speaker died
    in 1995. And Ubykh was lost with the death of its last registered
    speaker in 1992. Four languages in Turkey were categorized as unsafe:
    Zazaki, Abkhaz, Adyge, and Kabard-Cherkes. Definitely endangered
    are: Abaza, Homshetsma, Laz, Pontus Greek, Romani, Suret and Western
    Armenian. Three languages were classed as severely endangered: Gagavuz,
    Assyrian and Ladino. HÂ~Nrtevin is the one language in Turkey that
    is critically endangered. It used to be spoken in the province of
    Siirt in the southeast of Turkey.

    UNESCO Director-General Ko?chiro Matsuura said: "The death of a
    language leads to the disappearance of many forms of intangible
    cultural heritage, especially the invaluable heritage of traditions
    and oral expressions of the community that spoke it, from poems and
    legends to proverbs and jokes."

    As there are no current language protection programs in Turkey,
    UNESCO has urged the country to start running safe guard projects
    by including these endangered languages in culture, education,
    communication and science.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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