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Manchu Language Dying Out
mongolianhistory.blogspot.com ^ | 2007 | David Lague

Posted on 10/15/2011 10:32:36 PM PDT by Cronos


Meng Shujing with her grandson, Shi Junguang, and great-grandson, Shi Yaobin, in their hometown of Sanjiazi.
China's Manchu speakers struggle to save language

By David Lague
Published: International Herald Tribune,March 13, 2007

SANJIAZI, China: Seated cross- legged in her farmhouse on the kang, a brick sleeping platform warmed by a fire below, Meng Shujing lifted her chin and sang a lullaby in Manchu, softly but clearly.

After several verses, the 82-year-old widow stopped, her eyes shining.

"Baby, please fall asleep quickly," she said, translating a few lines of the song into Chinese. "Once you fall asleep, Mama can go to work. I need to set the fire, cook and feed the pigs."

After 5 children, 14 grandchildren and 5 great-grandchildren, Meng has the confidence that comes from long experience. "If you sing like this, a baby gets sleepy right away," she said.

She also knows that most experts believe the day is approaching when no child will doze off to the sound of these comforting words.

Ms. Meng is one of 18 residents of this isolated village in northeastern China, all older than 80, who, according to Chinese linguists and historians, are the last native speakers of Manchu.

Descendants of seminomadic tribesmen who conquered China in the 17th century, they are the last living link to a language that for more than two and a half centuries was the official voice of the Qing Dynasty, the final imperial house to rule from Beijing and one of the richest and most powerful empires the world has known.

With the passing of these villagers, Manchu will also die, experts say. All that will be left will be millions of documents and files in Chinese and foreign archives, along with inscriptions on monuments and important buildings in China, unintelligible to all but a handful of specialists.

"I think it is inevitable," said Zhao Jinchun, an ethnic Manchu born in Sanjiazi who taught at the village primary school for more than two decades before becoming a government official in the city of Qiqihar, 50 kilometers, or 30 miles, to the south. "It is just a matter of time. The Manchu language will face the same fate as some other ethnic minority languages in China and be overwhelmed by the Chinese language and culture."

(While most experts agree that Manchu is doomed, Xibo, a closely related language, is likely to survive a little longer. Xibo is spoken by about 30,000 descendants of members of an ethnic group allied to the Manchus who in the 18th century were sent to the newly conquered western region of Xinjiang. But it too is under relentless pressure from Chinese.)

The disappearance of Manchu will be part of a mass extinction that some experts forecast will lead to the loss of half of the world's 6,800 languages by the end of the century. But few of these threatened languages have risen to prominence and then declined as rapidly as Manchu.

Within decades of establishing their dynasty in 1644, the Qing rulers had brought all of what was then Chinese territory under control. They then embarked on a campaign of expansion that roughly doubled the size of their empire to include Xinjiang, Tibet, Mongolia and Taiwan. However, the dynasty's fall in 1911 meant that the Manchus were relegated to the ranks of the more than 50 other ethnic minorities in China, their numbers dwarfed by the dominant Han, who today account for 93 percent of the country's 1.3 billion people, according to official statistics.

Indistinguishable by appearance, the Manchus have melded into the general population. There are now about 10 million Chinese citizens who describe themselves as ethnic Manchus. Most live in what are now the northeastern provinces of Liaoning, Jilin and Heilongjiang, although there are also substantial numbers in Beijing and other northern cities.

For generations, the vast majority have spoken Chinese as their first language. Manchu survived only in small, isolated pockets like Sanjiazi, where, until a few decades ago, nearly all the residents were ethnic Manchus. Most are descended from the three main families that made up a military garrison established here in 1683 on the orders of the Qing emperor, Kangxi, to deter Russian territorial ambitions, according to Zhao.

The traditional Manchu-style wood- and-adobe farmhouses have largely been replaced by Chinese-style brick homes, the local residents say. The village now looks just like any other settlement in this region as a biting wind whips snow across the bare ground between the houses and the piles of dried cornstalks, stacked high to feed cattle and pigs through the winter.

Traditional shamanistic rites, along with ethnic dress and customs, have also been mostly abandoned, although some wedding and funeral ceremonies retain elements of Manchu rituals, Zhao said. But, villagers still observe one Manchu taboo that sets them apart from others in China's far northeast."We don't eat dog meat," Zhao said. "And we would never wear a hat made from dog fur." The prohibition, tradition has it, honors a dog credited with having saved the life of Nurhachi, the founder of the Manchu state, who lived from 1559 to 1626.

Even now, about three-quarters of Sanjiazi's 1,054 residents are ethnic Manchus but the use of Chinese has increased dramatically in recent decades as roads and modern communications have increasingly exposed them to the outside world. Only villagers of Meng's generation now prefer to speak Manchu.

"We are still speaking it, we are still using it," said Meng, a cheerful woman with thick gray hair pulled back in a neat bun. "If the other person can't speak Manchu then I'll speak Chinese."

But Meng disputes the findings of visiting linguists that there are 18 villagers left who can still speak fluently. By her standards, only five or six of her neighbors are word-perfect in Manchu.

Zhao, 53, on the other hand, estimates that about 50 people in the village have a working grasp of the language.

"My generation can still communicate in Manchu," he said, although he acknowledged that most villagers speak Chinese almost all the time at home.

Meng supports efforts to keep the language alive. Her 30-year-old grandson, Shi Junguang, has studied hard to improve his Manchu and teaches speaking and writing to the 76 pupils, 7 to 12 years old, at the village school.

This is the only primary school in China that offers classes in Manchu, according to officials from the local ethnic affairs office. These lessons, which Shi shares with one other teacher, take up only a small proportion of classroom time but they are popular with students, say the school's staff and other residents in the village.

"Because they are Manchus, they are interested in these classes," Shi said.

He is also teaching basic conversation to his 5-year-old son, Shi Yaobin, and encourages him to speak with his great-grandmother. "It would be a great blow for us if we lose our language," he said.

But most experts say that with so few people left to speak it, attempts to preserve Manchu are futile.

"The spoken Manchu language is now a living fossil," said Zhao Aping, an ethnic Manchu and an expert on Manchu language and history at Heilongjiang University in the provincial capital, Harbin. "Although we are expending a lot of energy on preserving the language and culture, it is very difficult. The environment is not right."

While scholars agree it is now only a matter of time before Manchu falls silent, in Sanjiazi, Meng clings to hope.

"I don't have much time," she said. "I don't even know if I have tomorrow. But I will use the time to teach my grandchildren.

"It is our language, how can we let it die? We are Manchu people."


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: china; culture; epigraphyandlanguage; foreign; godsgravesglyphs; manchu
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To: Cronos
It would be a tragedy for another language to be wiped out.

I'm not sure I agree with that. When some part of a human society or culture "dies out," it's often because it simply doesn't have any functional purpose anymore as time goes on. It sounds to me as if this is the case with these eclectic languages that originated in regions that never became dominant in commerce with the outside world to the point where the language spread far and wide.

And in any case, I'd also point out that for every language that is "wiped out," we may have new ones spring up in its place even if we don't recognize it now. I was in New York City a few weeks ago and overheard a conversation between two African-American girls on the subway, and I could barely understand a word they were saying even though it was allegedly "English."

21 posted on 10/16/2011 6:21:38 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("If you touch my junk, I'm gonna have you arrested.")
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To: Clock King

Accordingly to some sci-fi futurists, once the evil Corporatists deplete the Earth’s resources we’ll have to leave and everyone will speak Chinglish....


22 posted on 10/16/2011 8:27:48 AM PDT by mikrofon (Firefly)
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To: Greysard
don't have time to reply to all -- I will point out that the W&P translation isn't complete -- "ne m'en parlez pas" is translated as simply "don't" whereas it is actually more like "do not talk of it" --> a shade of more emphasis. Try --> http://tashian.com/multibabel/
23 posted on 10/16/2011 9:31:04 AM PDT by Cronos (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2787101/posts?page=58#58)
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To: Greysard
should be --> you're reading into things. I never said it should be enforced, I was pointing out in the same fashion as "one should eat vegetables" etc. -- it's in my opinion something that would enrich a person's life.

in this example the child could learn Manchu or he could learn Japanese or English or Russian. -- or he could learn both Manchu and English or Manchu and Japanese.

Very few people have a natural affinity for languages. -- I don't completely agree with that -- it depends on when the language is taught -- adults growing up in a monolingual society would find it difficult to pick up a language at 30-40, however for a child its not that difficult. Neither is it so difficult for a teenager and it does make them think in a different way.

24 posted on 10/16/2011 9:37:14 AM PDT by Cronos (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2787101/posts?page=58#58)
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To: Alberta's Child
Maybe it was Jive.


25 posted on 10/16/2011 12:40:20 PM PDT by Mmmike
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To: AfricanChristian; Ciexyz
Let me add that many native English speakers (Americans, British, Australian etc) wrongly assume that since much of the World speaks English that they are in a better position to understand the rest of the World or that the Anglo-Saxon Worldview is predominant.

you are absolutely correct. I was pretty blind to that fact until I traveled. We blithely think that all know English, but that's not true. We blithely think that our literature is the richest, but then we meet the Russians, French, Poles, Chinese, japanese etc.

26 posted on 10/17/2011 1:08:40 AM PDT by Cronos (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2787101/posts?page=58#58)
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To: BunnySlippers
It’s call evolution.

Well, I believe in creationism...

27 posted on 10/17/2011 1:09:17 AM PDT by Cronos (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2787101/posts?page=58#58)
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