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Cypriots rush to save Sanna, a language with just 900 speakers left
Cypriots rush to save Sanna, a language with just 900 speakers left

Time of India

time25-05-2025

  • General
  • Time of India

Cypriots rush to save Sanna, a language with just 900 speakers left

Maronite Catholic faithful bring their hands together in prayer during a service in outside St. George Church in the Maronite village of Kormakitis in the breakaway north of the ethnically divided Cyprus on Wednesday, April 23, 2025. (AP Photo) KORMAKITIS (CYPRUS): Ash dangled precariously from Iosif Skordis' cigarette as he reminisced with fellow villagers in a language on the edge of extinction, one that partly traces its roots to the language Jesus Christ once spoke. The 97-year-old is one of only 900 people in the world who speak Cypriot Maronite Arabic, or Sanna. Today, his village of Kormakitis is the last bastion of a language once spoken by tens of thousands of people. Until less than two decades ago, the tongue, an offshoot of Syrian Arabic that has absorbed some Greek, had no written script, since children learnt it from parents orally. Sanna is at risk of disappearing, according to the Council of Europe's minority language experts. But the 7,500-strong Maronite community in Cyprus is pushing back. With help from the Cypriot govt and the EU, it has built schools, created a Sanna alphabet to publish textbooks and begun classes to keep the language alive and thriving. Sanna was brought to Cyprus by Arab Christians fleeing invading Arab Muslim fighters in what is now Syria, Lebanon and Israel, starting as early as the 8th century. Sanna at its root is a semitic language that, unlike other Arabic dialects, contains traces of the Aramaic that was spoken by populations prior to the Arab invasion of the Levant, says University of Cyprus linguistics professor Marilena Kariolemou, who leads the team responsible for the language's revitalisation.

Only 900 speakers of the Sanna language remain. Now Cyprus' Maronites are mounting a comeback
Only 900 speakers of the Sanna language remain. Now Cyprus' Maronites are mounting a comeback

Washington Post

time24-05-2025

  • General
  • Washington Post

Only 900 speakers of the Sanna language remain. Now Cyprus' Maronites are mounting a comeback

KORMAKITIS, Cyprus — Ash dangled precariously from Iosif Skordis' cigarette as he reminisced with fellow villagers in a language on the edge of extinction, one that partly traces its roots to the language Jesus Christ once spoke. The 97-year-old Skordis is one of only 900 people in the world who speak Cypriot Maronite Arabic, or Sanna. Today, his village of Kormakitis is the last bastion of a language once spoken by tens of thousands of people across dozens of villages.

AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction
AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction

Toronto Star

time24-05-2025

  • General
  • Toronto Star

AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction

KORMAKITIS, Cyprus (AP) — Only about 900 people in the world speak Cypriot Maronite Arabic. The offshoot of Syrian Arabic has been passed on orally over the centuries. Now it is at risk of extinction. That's according to the Council of Europe's minority language experts. But the Maronite community in Cyprus is fighting back. It has help from the Cypriot government and the European Union to save the language.

AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction
AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction

Hamilton Spectator

time24-05-2025

  • General
  • Hamilton Spectator

AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction

KORMAKITIS, Cyprus (AP) — Only about 900 people in the world speak Cypriot Maronite Arabic. The offshoot of Syrian Arabic has been passed on orally over the centuries. Now it is at risk of extinction. That's according to the Council of Europe's minority language experts. But the Maronite community in Cyprus is fighting back. It has help from the Cypriot government and the European Union to save the language. ___ This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction
AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction

Yahoo

time24-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

AP PHOTOS: Cyprus' Maronites fight to stop their Cypriot Maronite Arabic from extinction

KORMAKITIS, Cyprus (AP) — Only about 900 people in the world speak Cypriot Maronite Arabic. The offshoot of Syrian Arabic has been passed on orally over the centuries. Now it is at risk of extinction. That's according to the Council of Europe's minority language experts. But the Maronite community in Cyprus is fighting back. It has help from the Cypriot government and the European Union to save the language. ___ This is a photo gallery curated by AP photo editors.

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