The following article is from the Nigerian paper, The Nation, at 
http://www.thenationonlineng.net/2011/education/55972-how-to-preserve-africa%E2%80%99s-languages.html

How to preserve Africa's languages
By KOFOWOROLA BELO-OSAGIE 02/08/2012 00:00:00

* The concern over the disappearance of local languages is not new.But, to 
renowned Kenyan author Prof Ngugi Wa Thiong' O, failure to invest in teaching 
children indigenous languages will have grave implications. KOFOWOROLA 
BELO-OSAGIE reports. *

As far as nine-year-old Jesse Iriah is concerned, she is not a Nigerian. And 
she may be right. 

She was born in New York to a Yoruba mother and Edo father.  She speaks only 
English.  She knows a little Yoruba, though, at least she hears a bit of it 
when her mother speaks with relatives, but she doesn't understand what Ora, her 
father's language, is at all. 

"I am American.  I am not a Nigerian," she told this reporter with all sense of 
seriousness at the prize giving ceremony of the upscale school she attends.  

Asked about how much Yoruba she can speak, she said: "I can speak two 
proverbs."  One of them is "Ise l'oogun ise", which she learnt at school.

She is among thousands of school-aged children across the country growing up in 
homes where English is exalted above the mother tongue as the preferred 
language of communication. 

Her kind are born to a generation of highflying comfortable young 
professionals, many of whose parents also maintained a similar language regime 
during their childhood. 

However, renowned Kenyan author Prof Ngugi wa Thiong' O does not think such 
should be encouraged.  His description of the practice as enslavement took on a 
whole new meaning for the audience at the Read Africa Launch by UBA Foundation 
at the UBA Headquarters, Marina, Lagos on Monday last week. 

Urging the foundation to support publishing in local languages, the 
distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University 
of California, Irvine, United States, said: "You don't say there are too many 
languages in the world. Languages are keys to knowledge.  The more languages 
you know, the more keys to treasure houses you have.  If you know all the other 
languages and don't know your language that is called enslavement. If you know 
your language and add all the other languages, that is called empowerment." 

The impact of his statement on those in attendance was expressed by Mr Kenneth 
Uzoka, Deputy Managing Director of the bank, who lamented that most parents do 
not teach their children their languages. 

"Professor has given us a new definition of empowerment.   How many of us can 
have a conversation with our children in our language? I am not sure we are up 
to 10 per cent, so that is slavery.  I think we should applaud the professor.  
This is a man who has taught in Yale but he converses with his son in their 
local dialect," he said.

Despite the seeming superiority pupils feel being able to speak English 
fluently without learning their mother tongue, some of them admitted feeling 
left out when surrounded by family members speaking their languages.  

Jesse said: "My mummy speaks Yoruba to my aunty, grandmother and uncles.  When 
we have family gatherings, and everyone is speaking Yoruba, I feel left out."

Another primary school pupil, Gabriel Oliseh, regretted that he could not speak 
the dialect of the Ukwani people of Delta State.  However, he is making effort 
to learn Igbo from school and his grandmother.

"I speak some Igbo because I am learning it in school.  Also, my grandmother 
tries to teach me whenever I go to visit her.  My Daddy speaks his language 
almost everyday to his friends.  He even speaks Yoruba, Hausa and Tiv.  But he 
does not speak to us because he knows we cannot understand it," he said.

Mothers are, more often than not, the ones who transfer language skills to 
their children because they spend more time with them. However, while many 
underscore the importance of, and make conscious effort to teach, their 
languages, they do not insist that their children converse with them in those 
languages.

Mrs Olayinka Bello is proud that her daughter, Opemipo, a Nursery One pupil can 
speak Yoruba fluently.  However, the little girl will only speak it to the 
domestic help.

"She speaks Yoruba and understands, although she won't speak to you; she will 
speak with the house help. It is bullshit not to be able to speak your language 
to your children.  I had that experience with my elder brother.  They started 
having children in 1994 and decided not to speak vernacular to them as they 
called it.  They were surprised that my little girl speaks Yoruba and yet 
speaks English more fluently than their grown up children," she said.

Another mother, Mrs Ene Ndame, from Otukpo in Benue State, who is married to a 
Deltan, said her children, Isioma and Ikechukwu, pick a little of the two 
languages but still converse predominantly in English at home.  For someone who 
learnt her Idoma mother tongue as a teenager, she said parents who have no 
languages to transfer to their children are lost.

"You can never be lost with your language.  I have friends my age that do not 
speak their languages.  I learnt mine in secondary school. So, if I could 
learn, anybody can.  Those ones who cannot speak their languages have nothing 
to pass on.  They are already lost. If not English, a child should learn with 
his local language," she said.

The "If not for English" factor is the reason Mrs Julie Okoronkwo, a teacher, 
does not encourage her children to speak their mother tongue at home. Actually, 
my children don't speak but can understand my language.  We don't speak the 
language to them.  They pick it from our conversation.  The reason we don't 
speak to them is because we want them to be fluent in English.  When they are 
fluent in English, they can start speaking my language," she said.

However, language experts agree that young children can pick many languages 
easily without any confusion as early as age three.  Miss Misan Rewane, an MBA 
student at Harvard Business School on Seven-Up Plc scholarship, has 
participated in similar research.

"Under the age of five, children can learn up to seven languages.  I did a 
research in India relating to it.  If you greet a two-year-old Indian in 
English, he will reply in English.  If you greet in Hindi, they answer in 
English," she said.

Prof Ngugi seeks the enthronement of local languages above English, French and 
Portugese, describing them as the languages of power in Africa.  But, for this 
to happen, he said government must make the necessary investment.

Despite the National Policy on Education stipulating that children should be 
taught in their mother tongue or the language of the environment for the first 
three years of primary education, it is not being practised in most parts of 
Nigeria.  However, one of the proponents of the use of indigenous dialects as 
language of instruction, the late Prof Babs Fafunwa, demonstrated the 
workability with a research he carried out in the 90s. Entitled: "The Ife 
Primary Education Research Project," the control group used for the research 
were taught all subjects in Yoruba Language for six years.  The pupils were 
found not to be disadvantaged in anyway as a result of learning in Yoruba.

Nowadays, it is not easy to find teachers of local languages as they tend to be 
less favoured than their counterparts who teach English and other science 
subjects, a fact which the Executive Secretary of the National Commission for 
Colleges of Education (NCCE), Prof Muhammad Junaid, admitted in an interview.

He said: "Nigeria's language policy is that teaching must be carried out in the 
local language or the language of the environment in the first three years of 
primary school education. For instance, teaching in the Southwest zone must be 
carried out in Yoruba as the dominant language. But the problem again is where 
to get adequate teachers to take on the subject at this lower level. So, the 
policy is there, but implementation and lack of teachers have been the problem. 
Now, we are trying to encourage more people to study local languages and become 
teachers, who will be able to deliver the curriculum at that level of 
education."

However, some organisations are making efforts to help school children and 
others learn local languages they are unable to pick from home or their 
environment.  One of them is the National Institute of Cultural Orientation 
(NICO), which organises indigenous language workshops annually.

Mr Ohi Ojo, head of the Southwest zone of the agency headquartered in Akure, 
the Ondo State Capital, told The Nation that the one-month language programme 
helps children, especially those from privileged background, to learn their 
mother tongue.

"We have many children from private primary schools attending the programme.  A 
lot of them do not have cultural and language programmes in school.  Many of 
the children are from the so-called elite schools. Children who are from mixed 
marriages usually attend.  It is about creating awareness so that when they get 
to the streets, they can pick up a lot more," he said.

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