Globally the human rights doctrine does not include the right of having a language of your own. The European Union, with its 24 officially recognized languages (including Estonian) adopted the Erasmus+program in 2013. The smaller member states expected funding assistance for language training for its minorities, but the support was allocated for languages more popular for its potential students – English, French, German, Spanish, Italian.
What harm accrues to the communities that have lost their native language? It’s universally agreed among scholars that upon the death of a language, the wherewithal and capacity to understand a culture who spoke…
(Read more: Estonian Life No. 48 2020 paber- and PDF/digi)
Laas Leivat, Toronto