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Hi guys.
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(sigh)
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This is a response to my video "Les
consequences du Francais en Haiti"
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which I did it in French talking about the
consequences of French in Haiti.
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I published this in April and I have the
link to it up here and down there
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in my description box.
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I got some really strong reactions to
that post and it seems like I really hit a
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nerve for some people so I'm dedicating
this week's message to response and debunk
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the prevalent counter arguments I received
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Here are the main points I made
in that video:
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"French hinders comunication in
self-expression among Haitians
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It divides the Haitian population and
fosters an inferiority complex for the
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majority of the population.
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Haitions sustitute someone's ability to
muster a few words in French for wisdom or
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intelligence.Haitions fail to realize that
what they are seeing is more important
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than the language they used to say in.
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And lastly, Haitians by and large cannot
speak French.
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These are fairly common and well-known
issues I presented to support my proposal
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of eliminating French as one of the two
official languages of Haiti.
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But many didn't want to hear it and here
are some of the responses that I want to
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address.
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The first one is that the problem of Haiti
is one of education not of language.
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Here is my issue with that point.
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Everyone knows that the state of education
in Haiti is dire, that has always been the
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case in Haiti but have you stopped to
think that language is the basis of
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learning and education, so if you are
attempting to teach in a language that is
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cumbersome, unnatural and foreign to kids
then you keep them at a disadvantage.
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The medium that allows you to communicate
the knowledge you are attempting to pass
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on is extremely relevant.
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My experience as a student in Haiti was
that many of my teachers were not fluent
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in French, far from.
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So yes, there is an educational crisis in
Haiti and this isn't breaking news to
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anyone. But the fact that we are insisting
on sticking to French as the academic
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language is to our own detriment.
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It is pedagogically impractical and
frankly at this point pretty irresponsible
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The other thing people say that kind of
goes along with the lack of education
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argument is that well, we shouldn't just
limit our kids to Creole we should teach
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them French, Spanish, German, Italian,
everything.
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Ok, well, do I want our kids to learn
multiple languages?
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Of course.
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I would like every little Haitian out
there to know as many languages as the
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human brain can retain and my argument has
never been to eradicate French from
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Haitian schools but rather to repeal its
status as an official language of the
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of Haiti and instead prioritize Creole
which is the language that every last
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Haitian speaks.
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Luxembourg has 3 official languages.
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One of them I'm sure most of people have
never heard of, it's called Luxembourgish
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and it is the language that is indigenous
to its people, the language of the heart
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for them so to speak.
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Even though, not many people outside of
Luxembourg use it, that is the language
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that kids are taught in the first year of
primary school before switching to German
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and then French.
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And proficiency and all three of their
official languages is required for
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graduation from secondary school.
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Now as you can see they are somehow able
to pull off a
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trilingual educational system to go along
with the fact that they have 3 offical
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languages meaning their important
legislature, and official national affairs
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are recorded and reported steadily in all
3 of these languages,
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even the one that we've never heard of.
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What's the point of this little sidebar?
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Well, it isn't a sidebar at all.
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It is to answer to the people who would
rather say: let's just teach our Haitian
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kids every language on the planet instead
of focusing on teaching them in their
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primary language, Creole.
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A language that is said to be official in
our country yet all the important business
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political, professional and administrative
dealings are not recorded or reported
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in Creole.
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Over the years, when nationally elected
officials address the population,
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they deliver speeches in French and all
while everyone knows that Creole
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is the language.
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Creole is constitutionally one of our
official language but that's only"a L'oral
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like people say, meaning it's only
something we say.
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Have we even tried to apply it in that
capacity?
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Have we even tried before we start crying
how it is unsustainable as a global means
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of communication for our children?
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What kills me is that these people
objecting so passionately against the
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removal of French are the first to boast
that we defeated French in 1804
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and that's the one thing from which they
derive Haitian pride, yet they don't
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realize that they are perpetuating
oppression,
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holding stubbornly onto the language and
the ways of the French at the expense of
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their own culture.
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For those of you telling me that back in
the days, you and your friends used to
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speak French, that's like me say every
Haitian speaks English because my friends
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and I speak it.
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That doesn't mean anything.
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If you look at the data, education has
always been a privilege reserved for the
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very few in Haiti and only the educated
can manage to speak a little French in
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Haiti ergo.
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Certain people's experiences back in the
day when things were a little bit better
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for some doesn't demonstrate that at some
point French worked in Haiti.
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It never did and never will.
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Now, the other argument I got quite a bit
is that we can't get rid of French
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because we need something to keep us
connected to the rest of the world and
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people were also saying that having a
Creole take-over
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now would set us back because we would
have to start from scratch
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since Creole is such an unformulated
language.
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Ok, first of all, I hate to break it to
you but the world has left Haiti behind
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a long time ago, and it's not just because
our people don't speak French,
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it's because we have not invested or
educated our people.
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Speaking French is not what's going to get
connected or keep us connected to the
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world because we don't need French to
facilitate international exchanges
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and to implement French as a language of
the Haitian people would require the same
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effort as to implement any other language
outside of Creole.
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With Creole we have an advantage,
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that's our mother tongue, we already
speak it.
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We have to make the distinction:
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To teach French is not the same as
educating our people.
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Here in the USA, everyone speaks the same
language, yet you will see that an
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uneducated person cannot articulate or
express themselves.
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The reason why our Creole-speaking masses
sound uneducated oftentimes
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is because they are uneducated,not because
they are speaking Creole.
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However, French can make a smart and
educated Haitian sound stupid
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And a stupid Haitian who can remember
their French vocab and grammar rules is
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oftentimes reveal and considered smart,no
matter how dimwitted they might be.