Yoruba Lalokun, promoting
indegenous language in Nigeria
by Prisca Sam-Duru
When Adesewa Oyinkansola,
student of Yaba College of Technology Secondary School, performed two
poems in Yoruba language to the delight of the audience at the
quarterly cultural programme, Yoruba Lakotun, the applause that
followed proved that her dexterity was highly appreciated.
The
applause turned into a standing ovation when she said, “I
challenged my Mum that I do not want to be a stranger to my culture.
My Mum agreed and today, I prefer to read my Yoruba Bible and wear
Yoruba clothes.”
Her
performance paved way for discussions and lamentations of how
Nigerians are fast losing their indigenous languages to those of
foreigners.
It was however, observed
that Parents are responsible for creating a gap between children and
their roots through the systematic neglect of their indigenous
language.
Speaking at the cultural event hosted
by Olutayo Irantiola
last week at the Ethnic Heritage Centre, Ikoyi, Lagos, Mr
Ayoade Okedokun, author of Ika Abamo, Omo Elede and other
books in Yoruba and English languages, said, “there
are certain words that cannot be translated into Yoruba language
because it has no equivalent in English and vice versa.

Also, Ms Adebunmi
Adeniran, Chief Executive of Nailangs, a virtual keyboard that can
type 12 Nigerian languages with the tonal marks, expressed shock at
the rate in which Yorubas make it compulsory that their children
speak English when Yorubas in the Diaspora are keen about making
their children understand the yoruba language.
She
stressed that “Our mother tongue needs to be a reference point for
many generations to come and we have to ensure that it is preserved
with the use of technology and also orally as passed down from one
generation to another.
The programme was
dedicated to Benin Republic, a country where Yoruba language has just
been adopted as the second language. Although, there is a slight
variation of their Yoruba with that of those at the core of the
language, it is a right step in the right direction.
Participants at the event
called upon the Nigerian Government to emulate this idea rather than
making International languages compulsory at the expense of Nigerian
languages at all levels of learning.
File:13/03/2016\Yoruba
Language (Pix) 13/03/2016/Yoruba Language
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