Shan in exile seek to preserve language in digital age
CHAING MAI- The first, two-day seminar on Shan language and ICT
(Information and Communications Technology), aiming to find solutions to
enhance the Shan language through digital technology, was held on
January 18-19, in Chiang Mai, Thailand.
The main two issues discussed during the two-day seminar were standardization of Shan dialects and the Shan Unicode font.
The Shan have encountered communication barriers for both political
and geographical reasons, Shan living in Burma speak words mixed with
Burmese, and likewise the Tai living in China, Vietnam and India speak
words mixed with the national languages.
According to Puen Kham, a Shan language expert, Shan language and ICT
are linked as we live in the digital age which affects almost every
aspect of our lives. Moreover, he pointed out that the Shan should find
and use words used by their ethnic Thai and Lao cousins, instead of
Burmese and Chinese. However, he elaborated that if some words borrowed
from Burmese and Chinese are widely used, then their use could be
continued.
Sai Paing Pha, a Shan ICT specialist explained that the problem is
that people use different fonts, namely Unicode and Zawgyi Tai, and
people using Unicode can’t read Zawgyi Tai font and vice versa. Hence,
he urged those who use Zawgyi Tai, especially Sao Su Kham a revered Shan
monk and inventor of the font to revoke the Zawgyi Tai font.
Jai Long a PhD candidate and Shan ICT specialist, also stated that
Zawgyi Tai font was destroying the Shan Unicode and Shan language, and
urged Zawgyi Tai users to solely use the Unicode system.
Sai Aung Htay, another participant, said: “All young people here use
facebook, don’t you? I believe that many young Shan would like to type
Shan but it is frustrating when we just see squares and can’t read
them.”
Tai speakers mainly live in Burma, China, Lao, Thailand, Vietnam and
Assam in India. Thailand and Lao are the only countries where Tai is the
official language. In Burma, the Shan language was banned from being
taught in state schools for over a half century by the military regime.
Seng Murng Mungkorn, the president of the Thaiyai Education and
Culture Association, Thailand, addressing the two-day seminar on
language and ICT, said: “Language is very important for humankind;
whether an ethnic group survives depends on language, literature and
adjusting to the environment, even in the digital age.”
The seminar was attended by about 100 participants from different
sectors, including construction workers, domestic workers, civil society
organizations and individuals. The event was cohosted by the Thaiyai
Education and Culture Association; Shan Literature and Culture
Association of Chiang Mai.
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