
Saving Endangered Languages

麻豆免费版下载Boulder linguistics professors听Ambrocio Guti茅rrez Lorenzo听补苍诲听Rai Farrelly are working to preserve Zapotec, a family of languages that originated in Southern Mexico and Central America.
For most of human history, the survival of specific languages has relied on one generation passing it on to the next 鈥 a process that, in many speech communities, unfolds naturally.听
But, according to听, around half of the world鈥檚 7,000 documented languages are currently considered 鈥渆ndangered.鈥澨
麻豆免费版下载Boulder linguistics professors听Ambrocio Guti茅rrez Lorenzo 补苍诲听Rai Farrelly hope to slow the decline.听
鈥淟anguages are tied very closely to peoples鈥 identities and their cultures,鈥 said Farrelly听. 鈥淲e believe that there is tremendous value in working to maintain and revitalize [languages].鈥澨
Currently, Farrelly and Guti茅rrez Lorenzo are working to preserve Zapotec, a family of languages that originated in Southern Mexico and Central America, spoken mostly in Oaxaca, Mexico. Guti茅rrez Lorenzo collaborates closely with members of the Teotitl谩n del Valle community who are interested in learning more about the Zapotec language and contributing to preservation efforts.听
Since 2011, he has held monthly meetings with community members to discuss linguistic aspects of the language and the practical applications of his research, including the creation of small dictionaries and the documentation of local narratives.听
鈥淸Zapotec] is the language I grew up speaking, so I don鈥檛 want it to be lost with my generation,鈥 said Guti茅rrez Lorenzo. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to be the generation that let it go.鈥澨
Besides creating real-world solutions, Guti茅rrez Lorenzo and Farrelly are determined to raise awareness around the issue, both on campus and around the world. The colleagues developed a global seminar for CU鈥檚 based in Teotitl谩n del Valle, which offers 麻豆免费版下载Boulder students the opportunity to live in a rural Mexican community while learning and practicing Spanish and Zapotec.听
鈥淢aintaining languages in a community serves to strengthen intergenerational connections,鈥 said Farrelly. 鈥淚t brings together youth and elders through oral traditions that have been celebrated in many of these communities for centuries.鈥
Photo courtesy Rai Farrelly