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Letter from a reader in response to the article on mother tongue as a tool for basic grades

 

Dear E. Ablorh-Odjidja,


Thank you. The logic that goes thus: "since we have too many ethnic languages we better give them all up and adopt a foreign language to unite us" may sound attractive but not to people who have been dwelling on this ideological area for a longer time. A child learns best during the formative stages in the language engrained in his/her language faculty. Even adults adopt ideas better, put them to use better if taught or thought up in those most effective of languages: the first language; the language that they began learning while still in the womb. Some think that the first language is actually stored in a different section of the brain and is never lost easily. I have seen old people forget the learned languages as they got older but never the language they were born with. African toddlers are proud of their mother tongue in their early years and think it's the best language until they are old enough to think it's inferior. Our kids begin seeing that we are backward in relation to other world communities; so they begin associating our languages with inferiority and backwardness; indigenous religions too are shunned. But first language still is the best tool of learning and thinking. Creativity and inventiveness is attained most often and effectively in mother tongue because that's the language that is lodged in the deepest most efficient part of our brains. The modern African is deprived of this capacity because of the cacophony of foreign languages that interrupt the thought process.


You are wondering about my speciality. I am an Egyptologist trained in Kenya (Coptic Centre), South Africa (University of South Africa, doctorate in Near Eastern Studies), and Germany (Humboldt University for practicals in Egyptology). My earlier degrees were in the area of business (University of Nairobi, Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply). I ditched these and took up Egyptology as you have seen.


I learnt the dead languages and scripts of ancient Egypt and I was exposed to the working of the African brain before political and social, mental colonization by forces from outside burst in. The African of old Egypt adopted Greek, then Arabic as he mixed with the colonisers and his own language was suppressed. As he lost the language it went along with his proven capacity for creativity. This most creative of the human race isn't active now but perhaps going back to mother tongue may take us to where we were before.


I come from that part of Kenya where 85% of world beaters in long races hail from. I have spoken to many of them and they tell me that they "use mother tongue" when running. It so appears that they excel here because running does not require a foreign language in order to execute. Now suppose all school subjects were learnt in the first language. I believe this would produce world beaters in other areas too from here and elsewhere in Africa.


Kenya is intending to reintroduce instruction in mother tongue up to class four. Where learners are mixed ethnically, such as in cosmopolitan areas, Kiswahili will be used as mother tongue. English will be used as language of instruction from class 5 but it will be learned from Class 1 as a subject. In East Africa we have a unifying language called Kiswahili but it is mother tongue only to a tiny minority. Kids in cosmopolitan areas acquire near mother tongue command of Kiswahili and it's next best for such kids. This last paragraph means to address your concern.

 

From a reader, PhD

September 06, 2014

 

To read the response:  More

 

The related article:  When political correctness is sold as mother tongue for education reforms
 

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