May 13 2008

Orkney calls for action to save Celtic languages

Published by Gary at 8:05 am under Language, Modern Survivals

The BBC tells us that Dr  Donna Heddle has warned that without action to preserrve the linguistic celtic heritage, the old languages would become lost.

Orkney-based expert Dr Donna Heddle said without one they would become “devalued and lost”.

She was commenting ahead of a conference, Voices of the West, which will be held in Inverness in June.

Dr Heddle, director of the Centre for Nordic Studies at Orkney College UHI, said:

Focussing on education and broadcasting allows us to look at minority languages at work. This conference underlines the fact that we need to learn from each other and work together to produce a unified strategy, otherwise these languages will be devalued and lost. We will lose our tongues and without our tongues we cannot speak for ourselves.

Source

4 Responses to “Orkney calls for action to save Celtic languages”

  1. Webwitchon 15 May 2008 at 9:49 pm

    I am currently trying to locate courses in Scots Gaelic. I am hoping to emigrate to Scotland at some point and I feel I want to learn more about the culture and this can only be attained by learning the language. I would hate to see any of the unique languages of the British Isles lost.

  2. Garyon 15 May 2008 at 10:20 pm

    We’ll certainly keep our eyes open for any courses in Scots Gaelic - course details of Celtic language courses might well be a resource that other site users would find helpful.

  3. Webwitchon 16 May 2008 at 7:04 pm

    Thanks Gary. I’ve contacted a few Gaelic societies, but they all refer to the City Lit course, which clashes with my working hours. :-(

  4. celtic languageon 30 May 2008 at 11:44 am

    [...] lost.Orkney-based expert Dr Donna Heddle said without one they would become ???devalued and lost???.http://celticmythpodshow.com/blog/2008/05/13/orkney-calls-for-action-to-save-celtic-languages/Welcome to the Celtic Languages TeamFW MX DW MX HTML.http://www.thecelt.org/Celtic languages - [...]

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Bookmark and Share
All content on this site is believed to be either in the public domain or is presented as an introduction to the originating site. No infringement of copyright is intended. If an infringement has unwittingly occurred, please inform us straightway by email and it will be removed.