What is Esperanto? > Prague Manifesto
The graphic design for this page was “stolen” from a Swedish Esperanto web site because they did such a nice job of it.
Prague, July 1996
DEMOCRACY
Any system of communication which confers lifelong privileges on some
while requiring others to devote years of effort to achieving a lesser
degree of competence is fundamentally antidemocratic. While Esperanto,
like any language, is not perfect, it far outstrips other languages as a
means of egalitarian communication on a world scale.
We maintain that language inequality gives
rise to communicative inequality at all levels, including the
international level. We are a movement for democratic
communication.
GLOBAL EDUCATION
All ethnic languages are bound to certain cultures and nations. For
example, the child who learns English learns about the culture, geography
and political systems of the English-speaking world, primarily the United
States and the United Kingdom. The child who learns Esperanto learns about
a world without borders, where every country is home.
We maintain that education in any language is
bound to a certain view of the world. We are a
movement for global education.
EFFECTIVE EDUCATION
Only a small percentage of foreign-language students attain fluency in the
target language. In Esperanto, fluency is attainable even through home
study. Various studies have shown that Esperanto is useful as a
preparation for learning other languages. It has also been recommended as
a core element in courses in language awareness.
We maintain that the difficulties in learning
ethnic languages will always be a barrier for many students who would
benefit from knowing a second language. We are a
movement for effective language learning.
MULTILINGUALISM
The Esperanto community is almost unique as a worldwide community whose
members are universally bilingual or multilingual. Every member of the
community has made the effort to learn at least one foreign language to a
communicative level. In many cases this leads to a love and knowledge of
several languages and to broader personal horizons in general.
We maintain that the speakers of all
languages, large and small, should have a real chance of learning a second
language to a high communicative level. We are a
movement for providing that opportunity to all.
LANGUAGE RIGHTS
The unequal distribution of power between languages is a recipe for
permanent language insecurity, or outright language oppression, for a
large part of the world's population. In the Esperanto community the
speakers of languages large and small, official and unofficial meet on
equal terms through a mutual willingness to compromise. This balance of
language rights and responsibilities provides a benchmark for developing
and judging other solutions to language inequality and conflict.
We maintain that the wide variations in power
among languages undermine the guarantees, expressed in many international
instruments, of equal treatment regardless of language. We are a movement for language rights.
LANGUAGE DIVERSITY
National governments tend to treat the great diversity of languages in the
world as a barrier to communication and development. In the Esperanto
community, however, language diversity is experienced as a constant and
indispensable source of enrichment. Consequently every language, like
every biological species, is inherently valuable and worthy of protection
and support.
We maintain that communication and development
policies which are not based on respect and support for all languages
amount to a death sentence for the majority of languages in the world.
We are a movement for language diversity.
HUMAN EMANCIPATION
Every language both liberates and imprisons its users, giving them the
ability to communicate among themselves but barring them from
communication with others. Designed as a universally accessible means of
communication, Esperanto is one of the great functional projects for the
emancipation of humankind -- one which aims to let every individual
citizen participate fully in the human community, securely rooted in his
or her local cultural and language identity yet not limited by it.
We maintain that exclusive reliance on
national languages inevitably puts up barriers to the freedoms of
expression, communication and association. We are a
movement for human emancipation.
Franko Luin / 3 September 1996
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