The government of the Republic of Ireland have announced a new strategy to make the country fully bilingual in both Gaeilge and English by 2027. As a native fluent speaker I think that would be great, especially as Gaeilge is set to become an official EU language.
The problem is that the UK really did fuck our language good while they occupied our country - and English is like a disease, it's so easy to just know English and not bother with any other languages. I take pride in my language as part of my identity and my cultural heritage (and as a secret code language abroad!) but many view the language as practically dead, despite the fact it is a compulsory subject at school from primary school right through to the end of secondary school. Israel managed to revive the language of Hebrew - can the Irish do the same with theirs? Do other nations see their native language being eroded by the influence of English? It seems no matter what country you go to you'll be able to get by with English.
The problem is that the UK really did fuck our language good while they occupied our country - and English is like a disease, it's so easy to just know English and not bother with any other languages. I take pride in my language as part of my identity and my cultural heritage (and as a secret code language abroad!) but many view the language as practically dead, despite the fact it is a compulsory subject at school from primary school right through to the end of secondary school. Israel managed to revive the language of Hebrew - can the Irish do the same with theirs? Do other nations see their native language being eroded by the influence of English? It seems no matter what country you go to you'll be able to get by with English.
The Gaeltacht regions: pure first language Gaeilge-speaking regions are in red below -RTÉ wrote:
Govt announces 20-year bilingual strategy
19 December 2006 14:58
The Government has announced details of a 20-year strategy aimed at the development of a bilingual society where people will use both Irish and English.
The plan is based on 13 objectives which include full implementation of the Official Languages Act, the provision of services to parents who want to raise their children through Irish, and continuous development of Irish language broadcast services.
Speaking at the launch of the plan, the Minister for Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs, Éamon Ó Cuív, said he hoped the plan would be seen as a foundation for a new policy on which practical action with regard to the Irish language will be established.
