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C Despite the near constant buzz in linguistics about endangered languages over the
past 10 years, the
field has accomplished depressingly little. “You would think that there
would be some organized response to this dire situation
”
,
some attempt to determine
which language can be saved and which should be documented before they disappear,
says Sarah G. Thomason, a linguist at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. “But there
isn’t any such effort organized in the profession. It is only recently that it has become
fashionable enough to work on endangered languages.
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Six years ago, recalls Douglas
H. Whalen of Yale University, “when I asked linguists who was raising money to deal with
these problems, I mostly got blank stares.” So Whalen and a few other linguists founded
the Endangered Languages Fund. In the five years to 2001 they were able to collect only
$80,000 for research grants. A similar foundation in England, directed by Nicholas Ostler,
has raised just $8,000 since 1995.
D But there are encouraging signs that the field has turned a comer. The Volkswagen
Foundation, a German charity, just issued its second round of grants totaling more than
$2 million. It has created a multimedia archive at the Max Planck Institute for
Psycholinguistics in the Netherlands that can house recordings, grammars, dictionaries
and other data on endangered languages. To fill the archive, the foundation has
dispatched field linguists to document Aweti (100 or so speakers in Brazil)
,
Ega (about
300 speakers in Ivory Coast), Waimaa (a few hundred speakers in East Timor), and a
dozen or so other languages unlikely to survive the century. The Ford Foundation has
also edged into the arena. Its contributions helped to reinvigorate a master-apprentice
program created in 1992 by Leanne Hinton of Berkeley and Native Americans worried
about the imminent demise of about 50 indigenous languages in California. Fluent
speakers receive $3,000 to teach a younger relative (who is also paid) their native tongue
through 360 hours of shared activities, spread over six months. So far about 5 teams
have completed the program, Hinton says, transmitting at least some knowledge of 25
languages. “It’s too early to call this language revitalization,” Hinton admits. “In California
the death rate of elderly speakers will always be greater than the recruitment rate of young
speakers. But at least we prolong the survival of the language•” That will give linguists
more time to record these tongues before they vanish.