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Results tagged “Endangered Languages” from All Roads Film Project Blog

A top writer for National Geographic Magazine in France and an independent filmmaker, Sylvie Brieu has been covering cultural diversity issues and minority rights for 17 years, and her articles have been translated into multiple languages.

Born in southern France, Sylvie was exposed to different cultural backgrounds and ways of thinking at a young age. She was raised in a family that was closely connected to the land and spoke Occitan, an endangered romance language.

At the University of Paris-Sorbonne and UC Berkeley's Graduate School of Journalism, Sylvie earned degrees in modern languages, international relations, and journalism. She also developed a passion for Maya Hieroglyphics writing and now speaks six languages.

Sylvie began her career in 1992 as a socially-engaged documentary filmmaker and a TV reporter in California, where she hosted a news program. A few years later, she was elected to chair an international network of young journalists. She led two groups of professionals from five continents to Central and South America on a summer university tour that emphasized "freedom of expression and human rights." As head of the network, she also moderated a seminar in Thailand on "cultural and religious pluralism," which was attended by more than 200 participants from 86 countries.

As a young explorer, international reporter and a senior editor Sylvie has traveled all over the world - including trips to Pakistan, India, New Zealand, Easter Island, Ecuador, Mexico, Madagascar, South Africa and Sao Tome and Principe. Recently, her research efforts have taken her on a solo journey from the Andes to the Amazon, where she lived with seven different tribes in some of the most troubled areas.

Her investigations have raised awareness about the plight of some of the most vulnerable populations in the world, highlighting their creative initiatives to fight for their environment, their cultures and their lives.

In recognition of her inspiring work, she was granted the UNESCO CNF's patronage in 2008 for a long-term project with indigenous communities worldwide.

Now, she is a member of the All Roads Film Project's Film Advisory Board.

Congratulations, Sylvie!

Article by Claire Ensslin

UNESCO.jpgPARIS (AFP) - The world has lost Manx in the Isle of Man, Ubykh in Turkey and last year Alaska's last native speaker of Eyak, Marie Smith Jones, died, taking the aboriginal language with her.
Of the 6,900 languages spoken in the world, some 2,500 are endangered, the UN's cultural agency UNESCO said Thursday as it released its latest atlas of world languages.
That represents a multi-fold increase from the last atlas compiled in 2001 which listed 900 languages threatened with extinction.
But experts say this is more the result of better research tools than of an increasingly dire situation for the world's many tongues. Still there is disheartening news. There are 199 languages in the world spoken by fewer than a dozen people, including Karaim which has six speakers in Ukraine and Wichita, spoken by 10 people in the US state of Oklahoma. The last four speakers of Lengilu talk among themselves in Indonesia.
Prospects are a bit brighter for some 178 other languages, spoken by between 10 and 150 people.
More than 200 languages have become extinct over the last three generations such as Ubykh that fell silent in 1992 when Tefvic Esenc passed on, Aasax in Tanzania, which disappeared in 1976, and Manx in 1974. India tops the list of countries with the greatest number of endangered languages, 196 in all, followed by the United States which stands to lose 192 and Indonesia, where 147 are in peril.
Australian linguist Christopher Moseley, who headed the atlas' team of 25 experts, noted that countries with rich linguistic diversity like India and the United States are also facing the greatest threat of language extinction. Even Sub-Saharan Africa's melting pot of some 2,000 languages is expected to shrink by at least 10 percent over the coming century, according to UNESCO.
On UNESCO's rating scale, 538 languages are critically endangered, 502 severely endangered, 632 definitely endangered and 607 unsafe. On a brighter note, Papua New Guinea, the country of 800 languages, the most diverse in the world, has only 88 endangered dialects. Certain languages are even showing signs of a revival, like Cornish, a Celtic language spoken in Cornwall, southern England, and Sishee in New Caledonia. Governments in Peru, New Zealand, Canada, the United States and Mexico have been successful in their efforts to prevent indigenous languages from dying out.
UNESCO deputy director Francoise Riviere applauded government efforts to support linguistic diversity but added that "people have to be proud to speak their language" to ensure it thrives.

The Enduring Voices Project, a partnership between National Geographic and the Living Tongues Institute is working to address this challenge head on. Don't miss the broadcast premiere of "The Linguists" February 26 on PBS. Check your local listings for details.

TheLinguists_filmstill2.jpgFollowing a successful run across the globe on the film festival circuit, "The Linguists" (Seth Kramer, Daniel A. Miller, and Jeremy NewBerger) will have its world premiere broadcast February 26 on PBS (Check your local listings). The film, which chronicles linguists David Harrison and Gregory Anderson who are on a whirlwind race against time to document endangered languages, was a hit at the All Roads Film Festival 2008. With such a concerted effort lauded upon the ecological challenges of climate change, endangered languages provides a tangible reminder of the cultural implications facing our planet. Harrison and Anderson, the linguists, are at the forefront of The Enduring Voices Project, a partnership between National Geographic Mission Programs and the Living Tounges Institute for Endangered Languages.

The Chinese Cabinet is considering the creation of a "cultural protection region" for the Qiang, an ethnic minority whose region was deeply affected by the massive earthquake in May. According to state-run reports, the Qiang, lost about %10 of their population in the devastation. For a community who has its own language, no written text and relies on elders to hand down ancient traditions, such losses may portend catastrophic consequences to the fabric of its entire culture. Only a few dozen of the shamen, or holy men, who are the gatekeepers of the Qiang's ancient traditions remain throughout the region. Known colloquially as the "people in the clouds", the Qiang live in the mountains of the Sichuan province with a history dating back 3,000 years. The government's move to extend this level of support at the cultural level provides a stark contrast to recent violent clashes with the Tibetans and the Ulghur ethnic minorities, who widely resent Chinese rule.

Enduring Voices is a new National Geographic Society initiative that is both preserving and raising mainstream awareness to the tragic disappearance of our planet's precious languages. With so much focus on our depleting natural resources, it is easy to overlook severity of our endangered languages. Check out this story in the New York Times for the latest...
The All Roads Film Project supports these voices through film, music and photography through seed grants and a platform from which these voices can be shared with new audiences.

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About the All Roads Film Project Blog

The All Roads Film Project is a National Geographic program dedicated to providing a platform for indigenous and underrepresented minority-culture storytellers around the world to showcase their works to promote knowledge, dialogue, and understanding with a broader, global audience.

 

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