Relevance: Prelims/ Mains: G.S paper II: International: Polity
- The “near-extinct” Nepalese language Seke has just 700 speakers around the world. Of these, 100 are in New York, and roughly half of these 100 stay in one building in the city.
- Most of the Seke-speaking community in New York stays in the Ditmas Park area of Brooklyn, or in Queens.
- The last year, 2019, was the International Year of Indigenous Languages, mandated by the United Nations (UN).
- A press release issued by the UN in December 2019 quoted President of the UN General Assembly Tijjani Muhammad-Bande as saying that despite efforts throughout the year, one indigenous language disappears every fortnight.
Nepal’s Seke language
- According to the Endangered Language Alliance (ELA), Seke is one of the over 100 indigenous languages of Nepal and is mainly spoken in the five villages of Chuksang, Chaile, Gyakar, Tangbe and Tetang in the Upper
Mustang district. - The dialects from these villages differ substantially and are believed to have varying degrees of mutual intelligibility.
- In recent years, Seke has been retreating in the face of Nepali, which is Nepal’s official language and is considered to be crucial for getting educational and employment opportunities outside villages.
- According to ELA, difficult conditions at home and job prospects elsewhere have brought speakers of Seke to places such as Pokhara, Kathmandu and even New York.
- Therefore, the vulnerability of the language is linked to the migration of people to places where Seke is not spoken, which has reduced the intergenerational transmission of the language.
- The younger generation does not find much use in learning the language, giving preference to Nepali and English.
Languages in danger:
- UNESCO has six degrees of endangerment.
- These are: safe, which are the languages spoken by all generations and their intergenerational transmission is uninterrupted; vulnerable languages, which are spoken by most children but may be restricted to certain domains; definitely endangered languages, which are no longer being learnt by children as their mother tongue.