Esperanto proves resilient as the movement celebrates 120 years
With the prospect of international peace looking more distant than ever, it's worth sparing a thought for the work of Doctor Ludovic Lazarus Zamenhof.
A Polish Jew from the West of the Russian Empire, Zamenhof developed the Esperanto language in the late nineteenth century.
Dreaming of peace and international understanding, he constructed a composite of Romance and Germanic languages, which he hoped would be used as a universal second tongue.
Though his vision was never truly realised, small bands of Esperantists around the world are keeping the movement alive and hoping that the new global age may give the Esperanto a second chance.
It was a cause celebre for many anarchists at the begining of the 20th Century.
Esperanto in China and among the Chinese diaspora was for long periods closely linked with anarchism.
Mac OS X supports a language invented in the 19th century by a Polish ophthalmologist, a language invented in the 20th century for a sci-fi movie, and a language that formed in the 10th century on a Pacific island chain.
After U.S. English, make these your second, third, and fourth preferences respectively for your Mac’s application menus, dialogs, and sorting.
Answer: The three languages are Esperanto, Klingon, and Hawaiian and can be located by opening the International system preference, selecting the Language tab, and then clicking the Edit List button. Esperanto is easy enough to find but Klingon and Hawaiian aren’t as Klingon is spelled in the Klingon language (it’s the tlhlngan Hol entry) and Hawaiian is likewise presented in its native spelling. (You’ll find it just below Hrvatski.)
Find blog posts, photos, events and more off-site about:
language, Esperanto, Anarchism, Canada, Montreal, China, artificial language, Zamenhof
Take a look at:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.satesperanto.org/-English-.html: the association of the esperantist workers.
Toño
Thanks for the link, and if you click on Tono's name you will see he runs an Esperanto Blog.
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for the mention of (the constructed, planned, please not 'artificial'! language) Esperanto. We are active in Canada also, you know (and even in Calgary and Edmonton):
ReplyDeleteVancouver: http://esperanto.memlink.ca
Canada: http://www.esperanto.ca/kea/index_a.htm