Good post Don, unfortunately though, there are many Africans who 
don't see the need for African indigenous languages in official 
situations! These people, often in powerful positions, tend to 
favour the status quo, and will fight tooth and nail to keep it that 
way.

ciao
--- In AfricanLanguages@yahoogroups.com, "Don Osborn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
> While looking for a ref on written Ga language I came across this
> phrase on a background info page of a site introducing the 
language:
> "Even though English is the official language of Ghana, many ethnic
> groups continue to use their own language."
> http://www.addo.ws/language.htm
> 
> What I hear in this and quite a number of similar phrases in 
similar
> contexts - especially from non-Africans - is a sort of implicit
> assumption that the official language is what really counts and the
> maternal tongues are sort of anachronisms. That this phrase 
appears on
> a site introducing the language and culture of the Ga is a little
> surprising, but not too much so. 
> 
> There is a link between this sort of appraisal (I need to start 
noting
> sourves on all of these) and policies both of donors and 
governments
> that minimize or ignore African languages. There is sort of a
> subliminal bias agaimst use of African languages that I noted in
> another case ("And then there's the language problem" message #156
> Dec. 2003 in which people using languages other than English at 
home
> was described as a problem).
> 
> It is not necessarily a bias against things African, but often 
stems I
> think from the notion that there is a tradeoff involved in 
languages -
> you can't have both, which is fallacy #1; plus the notion that the
> "modern" official languages from Europe are naturally going to 
replace
> the indigenous languages as part of the development process - after
> all, African languages are not suited for technology, science, and
> complex reasoning, right? = fallacy #2.
> 
> In the world of software localization I ran across the notion that
> software in the official languages should suffice for Africa, after
> all, anyone likely to use a computer will have English or French,
> right? Then it turned out that some software producers had the same
> assumption elsewhere, for example in India ("but everyone speaks
> English, don't they?") or Hawaii (where the notion of localizing in
> Hawaiian language was scoffed at). We're moving past that now in 
many
> places, but it's another part of the larger problem.
> 
> For a non IT exampple of the same phenomenon: I ran across two
> references to Setswana in Botswana. The first in a business
> publication stated that English is more widely used than Setswana 
and
> the second in a more authoritative source on languages said that
> Setswana is used in all domains of life for the vast majority of 
the
> country but English is important and may dominate in certain 
domains.
> To me the first article seemed to reflect the view of outsiders 
whose
> interactions with a certain segment of the population give them a
> certain impression, but what they published creates an arguably
> mistaken impression.
> 
> Responses? There's a need to educate first of all. But foreigners 
will
> not respect African languages unless they see them being used
> seriously in domains that they see. Often they are ignorant of the
> level of usage in popular culture, media, community life,
> business/commerce and government - 
> 
> Then I wonder about the negative effects of calling a language "the
> official language of...." The irony in the case of Ghana, though, 
is
> that English is not the official language by law, just de facto. 
Not
> sure what to do in this case, but raising one or more major 
indigenous
> languages to the status of "official" as some countries have done
> would go a long way to countering assumptions that all that 
matters is
> the former colonial tongue.
> 
> Don Osborn
> Bisharat.net
>






 
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