Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 15 – Most discussions about language in Kazakhstan focus on the need
to promote knowledge and use of Kazakh by all residents of the country. That would
solve many of the country’s problems, they continue, but making Kazakh the only
language of national concern could create others, including increasing its
isolation from the world.
Instead,
two Kazakh experts tell Kenzhe Tatliya of Astana’s Central Asian Monitor that the country should instead promote a
transition from Kazakh-Russian bilingualism to Kazakh-English variant, thus detaching
itself from a fading power and linking itself more fully with the international
language of the present and future (camonitor.kz/32580-esli-zavtra-vse-v-strane-vdrug-zagovoryat-na-kazahskom.html).
Marat
Tolibayev, a Kazakh blogger, says that as of now, Kazakh language sources do
not have the amount of information which exists in Russian ones; but Russian ones
have far less than English sources – and that is likely to continue to be the
case for some time. That means that the
country should be promoting not just a shift from Russian to Kazakh.
Instead,
he argues, Kazakhstan should adopt a new “bilingualism,” one in which “English
serves as the basis for acquiring international knowlege and Kazakh for
national self-identification Every Kazakhstan resident will harmoniously and to
perfection master these two languages.”
Dzhanibek
Suleyev, an Internet publisher, agrees. “Today,” he says, “all world knowledge
is being created in English.” Scholars working in other languages can
participate in this process only if they secure the publication of their works
in English and if they keep up with English-language materials. Kazakhs need to
be able to do both.
Retaining
Russian as a bridge is no longer sufficient, Suleyev says. “We then in essence
are mere branch of dying Russian science.”
Remaining in that state is to condemn Kazakhstan to remaining a backward
“province” and to open the way for the appearance of a new “archaic”
consciousness among its people. That is something
the country can’t afford.
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