Will
you be any worse off the moment humans cease to speak in Aragonese? How
about Navajo, or Ojibwa? Or Koro, a language only just discovered in a
tiny corner of northeast India?
No,
you probably wouldn't, not in that moment. But humanity would be.
Science, art and culture would be. If, as the phrase goes, another
language equals another soul, then some 3,054 souls -- 50% of the
world's total languages -- are set to die out by 2100.
If
there is hope, it lies in the world's centers of information -- such as
Google. The search giant's philanthropic arm, Google.org, has launched the Endangered Language project, a website devoted to preserving those ancient tongues that are now only spoken by a few thousand of us.
The
site, launched early Thursday, features videos and an interactive map.
The curious can click on any one of the dots that hang over each country
(including a suprising number in the U.S.), each representing a whole
language.
You
can hear the heartbreaking, beautiful sound of Koro being sung, or read
18th-century manuscripts written in a nearly-dead Native American
tongue.
"Documenting
the 3,000+ languages that are on the verge of extinction is an
important step in preserving cultural diversity," write project managers
Clara Rivera Rodriguez and Jason Rissman.
The idea is to unite a lot of smaller preservation efforts under the Google.org banner.
"By
bridging independent efforts from around the world we hope to make an
important advancement in confronting language endangerment," said
Rodriguez and Rissman. "We hope you'll join us."
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