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Can
Irish be nomal? (Part Two)
In November last
year, far from the temporary plastic nationalism of the Irish Free State's March
bank holiday we, decided to investigate what the Irish language scene in Cork
was up to.
It's not the hardest
topic in the world to research. You can pin down most of the main Irish language
"players" pretty easily - they're mostly located in schools, UCC and
one or two in heavily tax-payer funded organisations.
Those involved
in the Irish Language in Cork love it. Without doubt they're a passionate bunch
who use the language wherever and whenever they can - their energy is encouraging
and infectious with few appearing pious.
Sadly, the reality
is that the Irish scene is mainly confined to academic surroundings, a few limited
talking circles and a handful of events closely tied to other aspects of Irish
culture. For the language to grow meaningfully in Cork there seems to be two
major stumbling blocks: the way Irish is taught in schools and the lack of places
and circumstances to use Irish after it has been taught.
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Leaving
cert students wrapping up their involvement with the language
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OLD SCHOOL
A leaving cert student destined to do the Irish papers in June has been studying
the language for at least thirteen years. Despite this, there's a big chance
he or she may NOT have been examined orally to this day.
For any language
to flourish outside the sterile walls of academia, young students leaving secondary
school must at the very least have basic conversational skills and be comfortable
speaking with their peers. Tied to this is the fact that once students leave
school there are little or no opportunities for them to use the language.
Irish language
press and literature is self-obsessed with the number of speakers. This is the
ugly yard stick by which state institutions and media judge the language's proliferation.
Some claim there are more Polish speakers than Irish speakers while the census
tells us that one million people claim to understand the language.
While focus appears
to obsess on tweaking the educational system, aspiring to eventually produce
perfect batches of gaelgóirs ready to take on the world, the sad reality
is that this year's leaving cert students will not have anywhere 'normal' to
use the language when they leave school in June.
By anywhere
'normal' it is meant that it is not common to use the language in Cork in your
everyday life. Its use outside the education system is minimal - the government
can build all the gaelscoils they want but if its not 'normal' to use the language
when the kids leave school it's hard to argue for their long term cultural value
to the tax payer.
DORMANT SPEAKERS
- "Sure I haven't a word of it!"
Many people we spoke to would claim not to know any Irish at all but upon further
investigation it's clear that most, often unbeknown to themselves, still understand
relatively complex sentences once spoken clearly. We all have a fundamental
grasp of grammatical structure and are furnished with a several thousand word
vocabulary but how can you be expected to launch into a fluid conversation if
you're not using it at least once a week?
What people really
mean is that they're not good at speaking it or feel too guilty about their
inability to converse. The fundamentals are still there to build on. The only
thing that's needed to stir it up is practice, but without the places and people
willing to collaborate it's tough out there in a world where English meets every
other need.
The enormous but
mainly untapped resource of dormant speakers (read: most Irish people) seems
like an ideal demographic to focus on. It begs the question: why are dormant
speakers not more aggressively targeted by Irish language groups? If half the
cash spent on unused public service translations was directed into reawakening
dormant speakers perhaps there would eventually be genuine demand for EU documents
and other public information in Irish. The chicken, it seems, has come before
the egg.
WASTED OPPORTUNITY
Over 50,000 students sit a leaving cert exam in Irish every year yet the number
of Irish speakers nationally is paltry. Like sand pouring through the hands
this glaring hole in the life cycle of a potential Irish speaker lies wide open.
To enjoy speaking
Irish shouldn't mean that you have to like set-dancing or trad. This tight bond
between Arran sweater elements of Irish culture is not always a positive. Nearly
all Irish language events involve traditional Irish music or some other native
form of entertainment - but it's not everyone's bag.
We wondered if we put on a 'normal' event that might otherwise happen on a week
night in February would people come under the assumption that they would speak
Irish?
CLUB DAON-PHOBLACHT
They did. Tickets for a gig in the Roundy on a cold Wednesday night in February
sold like hot cakes and we had to turn away over fifty people. Punters, mainly
in the 20-30 year old category listened to house music, laughed at a comedian,
and shuffled around to a live band. The only difference to any other club or
pub around town was that people spoke Irish all night.
Feedback was immense
and encouraging but drummed up a few questions. Why, if a few half interested
galoots like us with dodgy Irish, could fill a pub in town on a Wednesday night
with young Irish speakers, has this not been done before?
Irish language
bodies seem perpetually obsessed with reviews and strategy groups but few seem
to yield any 'big ideas'. To offer proper perspective, the next review of the
Irish language shouldn't come from within the language itself or from anyone
predisposed to the language living in the country. The equivalent of an independent
Genesis report would certainly ruffle a few cosy publicly funded feathers, but
more importantly would bring some reality to what is ultimately a complex but
fascinating social challenge.
The next Club
Daon-Phoblacht, in association with Foras na Gaeilge, will take place on Wednesday
April 2nd at The Roundy.
For
more info see: www.peoplesrepublicofcork.com/gaeilge
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