As many of us work towards independence, we need a vision of what a free Wales might be like. A broad agreement on the fundamental aspects of our national identity and goals, which can be shared across the political spectrum. This would form a foundation of shared values that can exist above the cut and thrust of everyday politics and exclusionary practices. And it must include the Welsh language.

I feel there must be a commitment to making Wales a fully bilingual nation. The Welsh language is at the core of our history and identity. Without Y Gymraeg, who are we? On that basis, how do we ensure the revival of Welsh as a truly community language? That means a language used in every aspect of life: in the home, the workplace, and social settings. We will need to have policies that address every aspect of the use of our language.

  • BakedGoods@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Don’t. Document it. Preservation is not a thing that works, for anything. Not for a banana and certainly not a language. By going against what Welsh people are currently doing, you are shaping Welsh, not preserving it.

    • Ilflish@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      Had to learn it at school and so anyone I knew who went knows Welsh as “That thing that we had to learn that will never be useful” Realistically the only thing that can help the language is to use it as a primary language and that’s easier said than done.