Connect With Your Roots - Learn Your Family Language
There are lots of reasons why people learn a foreign language -
love, business, travel, hobby, necesity etc., but one reason
that seems to pop up more and more is to connect with their
roots. Many learn in order to speak with or write to relatives
still using the language, others learn just to make a connection
with their ancestry, to immerse themselves in their own heritage.
How many people have a grandmother from 'the old country' who
still speaks with a heavy accent, or an aunt who speaks more in
her first language than English? Or how about some newly arrived
cousins still struggling with English? Even if your family has
been speaking English for generations, the vast majority of
people whose native language is English have ancestors from
other countries and communities whose native language was not
English. Many of us still have a fascination and an affinity
with things associated with that 'old country.' As an example, I
see many people who have a Cead Mile Failte plaque outside their
front door. It means "a hundred thousand welcomes" in Irish
Gaelic, and is a proud declaration of their heritage, as well as
a warm welcome into their home.
People of Irish ancestry living outside of Ireland (the U.S.,
Canada, England, New Zealand, Australia etc) often study Irish
in order to make some connection with their ancestry, even if
only to learn how to pronounce Cead Mile Failte or all those
interesting looking place-names in Ireland. Celtic place-names
have a peculiar tendency to last, even long after their original
inhabitants have moved on and been replaced by people speaking
different languages. Continental Europe has many such names,
perhaps owing to the unique qualities of the Celtic people
embodied in their languages. To quote John Millington Synge -
"There is no language like the Irish for soothing and quieting."
We often come to a time in our lives when we think about who we
are and how we got here, and a lot of that was determined by our
ancestors long before we were born. When combined with the needs
and goals in our present lives such as business, travel and
caring for our family this can become a powerful incentive to
learn a second language, particularly a language which we
already have a connection to.
The concept of family or community does not have to exist only
in the present. There is a wonderful quote by Christopher Ricks
which sums this up nicely - "When a language creates, as it
does, a community within the present, it does so only by
courtesy of a community between the present and the past."
In some small way, learning our heritage languages can open the
door to understanding what kind of people our ancestors were and
ultimately gaining a better understanding of ourselves. What
better way to define who we are in the present than by reaching
back into the past and learning more about our ancestors that
got us here.