Opinion
Keep Our Mother Tongues Alive
The importance of language lies in the fact that it is one of the ways people express themselves. There is no human being who does not make use of one form of language or the other that is to be understood by individuals or groups of persons. Even those with speech impediment, those that are deaf and dumb, also make use of a language called the sign language.
This underscores the significance of language in human life. Biblically, it is recorded that at creation, all human beings saw themselves speaking a single language until they set out to build the Tower of Babel. But when God knew their intent and how the common language would help them achieve that Herculean feat, He made humanity to speak diverse languages whereby a particular person’s language became strange to others not until he learns or acquires it.
From that time in history, people speak different languages and they take pride in doing so because language is a cultural, social and educational identity of a people that brings affinity and a form of brotherliness. It also creates a form of bond, especially when persons who speak or understand a particular language meet in an environment where that language seems strange.
With human and societal development, languages are not only preserved but are crucial in the devolution of culture from generation to generation, besides performing certain other functions including using them as weapons of oppression and colonization.
Nigeria is a multilingual nation where English language is fast becoming the first language of most Nigerians, which ordinarily ought not to be.
Unfortunately, the native language, or the mother-tongue, which ordinarily should have been the first language of a people, because it is the language that they needed to acquire first from birth, is now fast taking the place of a second or foreign language in our society. Even to some of us, our mother tongues are fast becoming extinct, because most of us do not only give it negative tags but are also presenting such language to our children as primitive, archaic or “unprofitable.”
This is why the efforts of Hon. Maclean B. Uranta, Chairman, of Opobo/Nkoro Local Government Area, who is working tirelessly to revive the native Ibani language, a variant of the Ijaw language, originally spoken by the people of the ancient kingdoms of Bonny and Opobo, is a welcome development and is highly commendable.
Hon. Maclean Bethel, Uranta has put in place structures where the Ibani language would be drawn up to fit in as a subject to be taught in schools in the area. To this end, he has not only engaged ad hoc personnel, but he is also liaising with relevant authorities to see to the realization of this lofty ambition.
According to Hon. Uranta, present Opobo sons and daughters who have attained the age of being in the senior secondary school and above may have missed the mark, but if the Ibani language is revived and taught to pupils at the kindergarten and primary schools’ levels and to students in the junior secondary schools in the area, in the next ten to fifteen years, he was optimistic that the language would not only have been revived but it would also have a chain of survival and substance.
The council boss who recently re-echoed his council’s plans towards the revival of the Ibani language while addressing parents and teachers of Comprehensive Secondary School, Opobo town, his alma mater, said that just as children of illiterate and semi-literate parents come home from school to bombard their parents with snatches of English conversation like ‘Daddy/Mummy, Good morning; How are you, etc and such parents get excited and even see themselves learning to chat with their children and wards in English language, so will the pupils, when they have access to learning Ibani language, come home to their parents with chats like toro; ‘Iboma; Omine omi’ etc not only to excite their parents but to also bring alive that spirit of Ibani language that may be going moribund.
Indeed, today, pupils of Arise and Shine Nursery and Primary Schools, Opobo Town, and institution where council is test-running its plans, do not just speak good Ibani language, aside English language – they can also sing and recite the national anthem and pledge in Ibani language.
The efforts of Hon. Uranta and the plans of Opobo/Nkoro Local Government Council to revive Ibani language and introduce it as a teaching subject in the area is commendable and worthy of emulation. If same gesture by the council can be extended to other languages like Kirika and Defaka, the plan to revive mother tongue in the area will be more meaningful, even as we call on other councils and their chairmen in the Sate and the entire Niger Delta States to borrow a leaf from Opobo/Nkoro, to sustain and give a place to mother-tongue learning and usage.
Oruigoni is of the Ministry of Information
Idanye Oruigoni
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