News
80th anniversary of Romansh as Swiss national language marked / 500,000 euros for Breton reunification
16 to 22 February
NEWS HIGHLIGHT
80 years of declaration of Romansh as national language. Of the four official languages of Switzerland, Romansh is the only one to be exclusive of this country. The language is spoken in the canton of Grisons, where it is also an official cantonal language and is taught in schools. Romansh is the main language for almost 44,000 people, according to official Swiss statistics (2015), although it is estimated that more than 60,000 can speak it. As regards to linguistic proximity, Ladin and Friulian are the languages more closely related to Romansh.
Romansh was declared a national language after a 20 February 1938 referendum in which 91.6% of the voters —only men at that time— and all the cantons approved it. Historians say the move sought to affirm the Swiss identity in the face of the rise of Italian expansionism led by Benito Mussolini, which had even argued that Romansh was merely an Italian dialect. In 1996, after another referendum, Romansh was granted official status at the federal level.
Seizing the commemoration of the 80th anniversary, Lia Rumantscha —the leading pro-Romansh group— has recalled that the language continues to face “challenges” that threat its survival, such as the depopulation of some valleys where it is spoken, difficulties that Romansh-language media have to undergo, or pressure from German, Italian, French and English in some places of the linguistic domain that have turned into international tourist centres, such as the Upper Engiadine region, where Sankt Moritz (San Murezzan in Romansh) lies. The survival of the language, Lia Rumantscha Johannes Flury has said, is not only a matter of the canton of Grisons, but for the whole Switzerland, if the country really believes in the value of its own diversity.
MOREOVER
Half a million euros for Breton reunification. The Regional Council of Brittany plans to allocate that sum to examine options to get the department of Loire-Atlantique (which is currently part of the region of the Pays de la Loire) back to the administrative region of Brittany. To progress towards that goal, Breton president Loïg Chesnais-Girard has proposed to establish a “joint mission” with the authorities of the Pays de la Loire, which until now have been completely opposed to even consider the loss of the department, in which their regional capital Nantes lies. The reunification of Loire-Atlantique with the administrative region of Brittany is a decades-long demand of the Breton movement, which has even organized popular, non-binding referendums on the issue. The Regional Council has also established a working group to examine the so-called “right of differentiation”, which allows regions of the French Republic to take on new powers.
MORE FEATURE STORIES AND ANALYSIS
- La Croix: Anna Gabriel, une exilée catalane anticapitaliste en Suisse
- New Internationalist: Frozen sectarian divisions heat up in Bosnia
- Deia: El 33,1% de los jóvenes vascos de 16 a 24 años tiene al euskera como lengua materna
- Osservatorio Balcani e Caucaso: Bilinguismo a Fiume