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New survey reveals increased interest in the Irish language in Northern Ireland

Those polled show interest in more options for Irish language


The Dail: Ireland's national parliament
The Dail: Ireland's national parliament

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The Department of Culture, Arts and Leisure in Northern Ireland conducted a survey on the public’s attitude toward the Irish language in the region recently.

The survey showed that the majority of those polled still hold an interest in the Irish language and believe that more options should be available to learn the language.

UTV reports on the findings of the survey entitled ‘Public attitudes towards the Irish language in Northern Ireland 2012' in Northern Ireland.

The majority (52 percent) of those surveyed believed it is important that Northern Ireland does not lose its Irish language traditions while 26 percent disagreed and 22 percent neither agreed nor disagreed.

The Westminster Government was committed to introduced the Irish Language Act through the St Andrews Agreement of October 2006 based on the experience of Wales and Ireland, reports UTV.

They also committed to working with the Executive to enhance and protect the development of the Irish language.

53 percent of those surveyed agreed that there should be more options available to learn the language, while 20 percent disagreed and the remaining 26 percent were neutral.

41 percent, the majority for this question, indicated that the language should be supported and encouraged throughout Northern Ireland.

35 percent disagreed and the remaining 23 percent neither agreed or disagreed. A staggering 81 percent of those polled believed that students should have the option of choosing

Irish language as a school subject if they wish. Interestingly, 52 percent felt that the Irish language was not important to personal identity while just under half (49 percent) believed the language to be important to the region's culture.

Just over half of those responding indicated that Irish should be included on leaflets, documents and notices where other languages are offered.


Nster.com


11 Comments

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'oldboreen' you're 100% wrong! To "revive" or create a language for millions of people would take thousands of years not just 100 years, It will happen as you can see by this poll there is more interest being shown and more people want to learn it in the North Of Ireland and there has been a great increase in the number of fluent Gaeilge speakers in the South and the North. There is actually more Gaeilge speakers now than 100 years ago. The language is not "dead" it will always be a live and there will be more people speaking the language in the future! & ByTheBay you can clearly see that it is not just asked by supporters of the language.
Irish will never be the majority language here but it is nice to see theres still an interest in it.
mfinucane: "no need to speak irish in ireland. everyone speaks english." Wow! Gee thanks for telling me, I didn't know that. What other brilliant insights did you have on your trip?
george dillion why should people learn irish when they don't need to,to interact w/the people around them?on my trips i've done very well speaking english.if i moved to mexico i'd have to learn spanish but no need to speak irish in ireland. everyone speaks english.
Gan aon amhra at bith is dea-scéal é sin ón thaobh eile den Teorainn, but those who hold high positions in the 'independent' part of Ireland care very little about that state's official language, and neither do most church leaders. For 8 years in the 80s and early 90s, I attended Irish language class in a Presbyterian hall in the Bronx, when the local R.C. pastor refused to rent us accommodation. It is encouraging to heat that there is strong support for an Ghaeilge in the 'Wee Six'.
Pay attention to GeorgeDillon's concluding paragraph my friends! He's absolutely right. The Irish have had almost a hundred years to revive the Irish language-whether by sheer neglect or policy,it simply hasn't happened.Sadly,as a commonly spoken every-day language,it isn't going to happen.Stop any ten people in any street in Ireland and ask for directions in Irish! You'll be very lucky indeed to be answered in the native tongue.
Bythebay is correct. Anyways, a huge chuck of the North will never support anything Irish, let alone the language. I'm just surprised this artice didn't refer to the language as "gaelic" like IC normally does. That was a refreshing change.
You'd find it hard to get any interest in the Irish language among the migrant population of the South. All surveys and anecdotal evidence show that foreign migrants in Ireland don't have the slightest interest in Irish. In fact there are undoubtedly more non-Irish learning Irish overseas from Ireland, places like USA, Russia, Japan, Argentina, than are studying it in Ireland. That's what's going to finish off the Irish language--Mass Immigration. Now, lest any fools jump in with verbal diarrhea, I am not blaming Mass Immigration for the decline of the Irish language. This process has been going on for a quarter of a millenium, and there are complex reasons for it, including the fact that the Irish themselves chose--almost unique among nations--to abandon their own language. Mass Immigration didn't bring the language to Death's Door, but it'll push it thru that door.
TayandCake, wise up. That Northern Ireland Department of Culture, Arts and Tourism is headed by Sinn Fein's Minister Carál Ní Chuilin. They have to assure the poll supports the answers Sinn Fein wants because they want money from the British Exchequer for it.
ByTheBay, always the pessimist, same old same old eh?
And how did they specifically select the group in this poll to get the answers they wanted???
 




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