
What aspects of your cultural heritage are you most proud of or interested in?
Right now, I am quite interested in (re-) learning the Welsh Language. Although I was born in Wales, I was never allowed to speak Welsh at home and my parents sent me to schools in which Welsh was never seen nor heard, let alone taught. That didn’t stop me from hearing out on the streets, reading it on the street signs, or visiting places whose names were only available in Welsh, or an Anglicized form of Welsh.
I am no longer an assiduous student of languages, but I get a Welsh Word a day by e-mail, and each word comes with an explanation of meaning and extended meanings. I also receive the words’ pronunciation and its phonetic changes (something peculiar to Welsh – they come in written form and can be quite complicated). Useful sentences are added – not long, but 3-4 seconds, repeatable ad infinitum, by reliable Welsh speakers, who often offer the variant pronunciations not only of North and South Wales but of other regions as well.
A great deal of linguistic and cultural history is wrapped up in language and the origins of the word are analyzed – sometimes going back to Indo-European, proto-Welsh, Medieval forms, and modern changes to the language. Emphasis is also placed on the survival of Welsh and its preservation, in written form, in Y Beibl Cymraeg, The Bible in Welsh. This fixed the language and helped enormously in its preservation.
I am also interested in Welsh Songs and Hymns. I already know most of the tunes having sung them in English during my childhood. Now I am learning them in Welsh and am currently working on the words to Calon Lan, one of my favorite hymn tunes. So, there you are. A new start at a very advanced age. A return to the past and an investment in the unknown future!
I have various ancestries; proudest of my Scottish, Scandinavian, and German roots. At Christmas time, we celebrate Kris Kringle, a legacy from storytelling by my German great-grandmother I believe.
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We are all of us filled with so many cultural treasures. Alas, not all of us are awake to them. I treasure the bits and pieces of my past that I remember and associate with. The different languages help too – each one filled with gems.
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Culture and language are intimately connected. Luckily I am not ‘studying’ this. Just going along with the flow. The historical and cultural elements come from the teachers themselves. My own graduate studies into the origins of Spanish etc allow me to follow the development and evolution of Welsh.
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I think this is wonderful, Roger. There are examples in Canada–French and First Nations–where cultural representatives are adamant that culture is tied to language. I suppose the Irish and Cornish feel much the same way. When you think through the sound of the words and the spelling, is there also a part where you study the relationship of Welsh to its linguistic predecessor, or it’s ‘cousin’ tongues? Lovely thoughts, Roger – Chuck
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