By: Rahim Hamid
I begin
my study by addressing some constructive questions about
the common
factors that can be attributed to the gradual extinction of language,
which frequently occurs intentionally and systematically particularly in
multiethnic countries that one language strictly dominated on other
languages as a discriminatory policy to assimilate the language of the
ethnic minority or aboriginal people by imposing the most spoken
language of particular majority on these people and placing a long ban
on their languages to build monolingual country. Apparently, the
non-Persian languages have been subjected to harsh measures of
linguicide
The Iranian officials seemingly are not
willing to stop burying their head under the sand and accept that people
in the integrity so-called Iran are not homogenous in term of ethnicity
to be able to bring them together under a certain political banner.
The policies
of linguicide in Ahwaz region, enshrined in the constitution and law of
Iranian regimes because according to 19 and 15 of Iran constitution all
non-Persian ethnic minorities have right for education in their native
language but fascist Persian regime violates the rights of learning
Arabic in Ahwaz and other non-Persian languages such as Kurdish in east
Kurdistan, and Turkish in south Azerbaijan.
This disgraceful policy was adopted by
Iran soon after the collapse of Qajar dynasty and formation of Pahlavi
monarchy where Reza Shah raised to power and formed the integrity
so-called Iran under the slogan of “Aryan land” by occupying non-Persian
neighboring regions that had full autonomy during that era such as
Arabestan (Al-Ahwaz) under the rule of Sheikh Khazaal in the south and
south west of Iran that later its historical Arabic name changed into
the current Khuzestan province. Let us put all this aside and raise some
questions concerning language:
- What is language death?
- Why should we care?
- Why do languages die?
1. What is language death?
The phrase of language death means a
process that affects speech communities where the level of linguistic
competence that speakers possess of a given language variety is
decreased, eventually resulting in no native or fluent speakers of the
variety. Language death may affect any language idiom, including
dialects and languages.
2. Why do languages die?
Here, I do include the sociopolitical
factors that are fuelling by Iran as systematic political targets in
Ahwaz region for eliminating the Arabic language among the Ahwazi people
whose native language is Arabic while they have no right to learn their language in an academic environment.
These sociopolitical factors are official language policies
(monolingual policies), racial discrimination, language stigmatization,
repression, war, forced migration, emergence of settlements and so on.
The above-mentioned factors were conducted against the Ahwazi Arab
people by the hand of Iranian regimes since 1925 until today. However,
among these factors, the Official monolingual policies can be and have
been a particularly decisive factor in language death of non-Persian
nations in Ahwaz, Kurdistan, Azerbaijan where local people speak in
their native language that characterize with aboriginal dialects. In
fact, after the Qajar dynasty, which had reigned since 1718, was
replaced by the Pahlavi monarchy on non-Persian languages and cultures
began to be enforced through violence.
3. Why should we care?
While the illiteracy rate in Iran is
about 10 to 18 percent, this is over 50 percent among the Arabs men in
Ahwaz (Khuozestan) and even higher for Ahwazi women .the indigenous
Ahwazi Arabs students abandon school that rate 30 percent in the
elementary level, 50 percent in secondary level and 70 percent in high
school because they force to study in the official Farsi language which
is not theirs. There is not any official institute
for teaching Arabic in Ahwaz and learning Arabic is just confined to
religious study for people who want to be a clergyman consequently the
Ahwazi Arab are semi learner in their native language and are struggling
to learn Arabic despite the denial of their Arabic language .
In fact, the education system in Iran promoted and enforced a superficial sense of nationalism based on Persian language and identity. Therefore, the multicultural, multiethnic, and multilingual character of Iranian was explicitly denied and oppressed.
Moreover, shortly after the
establishment of the Pahlavi dynasty in the1925, all non-Persian ethnic
groups and nationalities in Iran were denied the right to education in
their own language. Notwithstanding the fact that the non-Persian
nations such as Arabs, Turks, Kurds, Baluchs, Turkmens, and others
constituted the numerical majority in the country, all the Persian
regimes from Pahlavi to the Islamic Republic are sought to supplant our languages, cultures, and histories with those of Persian minority.
There are four criteria released from UNESCO indicating languages that are at the risk of death row:
UNESCO LANGUAGE ENDANGERMENT SCALE
Vulnerable: Most children speak the language, but it may be restricted to certain domains (e.g., home).
Definitely endangered: Children no longer learn the language as mother tongue in their home.
Severely endangered: Language is spoken by grandparents and older generations; while the parent generation may understand it, they do not speak it to children or among themselves.
Critically endangered: The youngest speakers are grandparents and older people, and they speak the language partially and infrequently.
Yet, it is not surprise if we admit that
the harshest policy of deliberate linguicide definitely practiced in
Iran, where the entire state machinery is mobilized in order to
eliminate the non-Persian languages including Arabic ,Turkish and
Kurdish in both speaking and writing. However, non-Persian people are
free to speak in their native tongue in private spaces (e.g., home).but,
it would be considered a crime against the “territorial integrity” of
the state if a member of the parliament or a political party uses the
language in political campaigns, or if the language used in education or
broadcasting. It is still illegal to write in the language. Most
publications in Arabic in Ahwaz are regularly banned and confiscated,
and authors, translators, publishers, distributers, and even readers are
punished by the state.in the recent years several cultural institutes
e.g., Al-HiWar, the cultural institute, was banned and all its founders
arrested and sentenced to death penalty under some vaguely -worded
charges. This cultural institute despite the severe restriction on its
cultural activism was striving to revive the Arabic language among the
young generation by holding some educational, cultural programs.
Based on the four above standard
indicators about “the language endangerment scale”, I will explain the
indicators by comparing them with the suppressed non-Persian languages
that are plagued in terrible restricted domain of a harsh linguicide policy:
Linguicide and experience
Similar to other Ahwazi Arab native
speaker, I have experienced bitter times of linguicide. Born into an
Ahwazi Arab family in an Ahwazis town, I had to get my education in
Persian, the only official language in Iran, a multilingual country
where Persian was the native tongue of any half the population.
At Ahwaz University, where I studied
linguistics (2006-2010), my professors rarely referred to non-Persian
languages and if my classmates from Kurdistan and Azerbaijan or I bring
some discussions about Arabic, Kurdish and Turkish language entities,
our professors reluctantly answered our questions. These discussions in
the class regarding
the non-Persian languages would be considered ‘secessionism’, the
unforgivable charges that are always waged against our people.
Non-Persian nations were subjected to open
and shameful acts of linguicide, cultural annihilation, and forced
assimilation. It is apparent that the Iranian regime certainly wants
non-Persian people to lose their cultural independence and, in many
cases, their spirituality, all of which go hand in hand with language.
As some historical facts have been
passed from generation to generation to recall how thousands of Ahwazi
Arab people in schools and offices and even in the street were arrested,
tortured, and disgraced on charges of speaking in Arabic particularly
in Al-Mohammara during the Pahlavi regime. Since 1925, Reading or
writing in Iran’s non-Persian languages was treated as evidence of
secessionism, treason and violation of the territorial integrity of the
state.
The language policy of the Islamic
regime, which came to power in 1979, was no different, in principle,
from that of the secular monarchy. Article 15 of the Islamic
constitution, which, in contrast with the 1906 constitution, does allow
for the teaching of “ethnic literature” in schools, has not been
implemented yet. Persian continues to be the only official language in a
country where it is the native tongue of no more than half the
population. Although publications in non-official languages are
tolerated, the symbolic violence, the vilifying of non-official
languages, has not come to the end.
Iranian regime not only targeted the speaking, writing, folklore music and
every other related expressions in language but also they waged
extensive state violence against all the aboriginal and historical name
of places in the non-Persian region. Geographic terms, including the
names of mountains, cities, villages, streets, rivers and regions, have
been persianized.
Today we can see that all the original
Arabic names of cities, villages and rivers in Al-Ahwaz were replaced by
fabricated Persian names. It is likely surprise you that Ahwazi Arab
are not allowed to name their children, as they like. There is a book of
permitted names at civil registers,
and no one can pick a name that is not in this book. For instance,
Iranian authorities do not allow people to choose Abu Bakr, Umar,
Uthman, or Aisha as names for their children In Ahwaz. Civil registers
will not put these names on ID cards.
In many cases, TV Farsi channels, radio
stations and magazines openly and systematically insult the
well-respected figures of non-Persian religious
or historical Arab figures steering a symbolic violence, in the form of
a systematic extensive propaganda campaign in order to shame Arab
native speakers into abandoning their language and their identity.
By this assessment, we can classify the
Arabic language in Ahwaz along with other non-Persian languages as
“severely endangered languages” under the threat of extinction or
gradual death where the transmission of language between generations was
interrupted by deliberate Persian machinery of Iranian government . To
clarify this situation, I propose the term “linguistic suicide” to refer
to situations where parents who are speakers of minority language
deliberately choose not to teach this language to their children and
instead adopt a majority language in their home. The major reason for
this phenomenon
is the low prestige attached to the minority language for example the
Arabic language called the speech of illiterate and rural people. All
these discriminatory policy against language aims to kill the Arabic
language in Ahwaz that lead people to dress Persian culture. the other
reason for linguistic suicide is concern about children’s ability to
acquire fluency in Persian language, the socially-and economically
–dominant language in Iran.
It is time for linguists in Iran to stop
their silence and speak out against these systematic linguicide
policies conducting against non-Persian languages in Iran because the
death of language is the death of the soul and identity of people.
At the end, I would like to dedicate
this article to everyone who stands to the freedom, every oppressed
nation particularly in the Middle East because the new Middle East must
be peace, friendship and achievement of national rights of the oppressed
nations who lived under racial subrogation for years and the world must
open its eyes and support the suffocated voices of these occupied nations especially in Iran.
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