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Monday, November 21, 2011

HOT TOPICS: The Spanish Language in the Philippines

On Wednesday, Nov. 23, language teachers and experts from all over the region will assemble in the Instituto Cervantes de Manila for the Second Conference of Spanish as a Foreign Language in Asia and the Pacific which will be inaugurated by Speaker Feliciano Belmonte. Many will remember the common heritage and the historical bonds between our two countries but wonder why reviving the Spanish language is an issue of interest in the Philippines as we enter the second decade of the 21st century.
Way back in 1937, President Manuel L. Quezon, referring to Spanish, said that “the Latin-American people believe and feel that we Filipinos form part of that vast family, the children of Spain. Thus, although Spain ceased to govern those countries many years ago and although another nation is sovereign in the Philippines, those Latin-American peoples feel themselves as brothers to the people of the Philippines. It is the Spanish language that still binds us to those peoples eternally if we have the wisdom and patriotism of preserving it.”

Read the full story here at Inquirer Opinion....

What your thoughts? Express you comments below...thanks!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

12 December 1888 Malolos, Bulacan submitted a petition to Gov-Gen. Valeriano Weyler requesting permission to set up a night school that would teach them the Spanish language. Propagandists Rizal and Del Pilar lauded the lasses 'exceptionally courageous' in a letter to the women. The height of Spanish speaking in the Philippines started when it became compulsory in all public school systems in 1865 until the Fall of Manila (esp. Intramuros)in WW2 and finally in 1987. Spain no longer owns the language. Though foreign it seems but I believe Spanish is also a Filipino language and learning it makes me even more Filipino. We got heaps of Filipino literature in Spanish written by real Filipinos in the past and the Premio Zóbel awarded the exceptional. Unfortunately, the last recipient of the award was given in 2008. "No quiero que el español muera en Filipinas. (I don’t want Spanish to die in the Philippines.)"—Enrique Zóbel, founder Premio Zóbel