Serving
the New Generation, and the Community
The University of
Hawaii’s Ilokano Language and Literature Program will turn 40 next
year. This year marks a kick-off that presents the best of the program’s
students and the best it offers to the community.
Passing through the portals of the program were students who have come
unto their own, now becoming their own person, for which reason the program can
never be prouder.
Peerless—there is not any single university anywhere else, not in the
United States, not in the Philippines, where studies on the Ilokano “language, literature, and life” is being taught
with academic rigor—the UH Manoa Ilokano Program has proven time and again that (a)
instruction is the key to academic training and the preparation of students to
appreciating life-long learning, (b) research makes faculty and students on the
look out for what is best out there, the best that is yet to be known, and (c)
extension work with the community and all other sectors in and outside the
university is what relevance makes—relevance that ought to be the twin of every
heritage (or academic) program.
Starting from a handful of students in 1972, students who were curious
what kind of language was being spoken at their homes, and sometimes, at their
back, the UH Ilokano Program has grown to hundreds,
averaging 150 students every semester for the last five years.
Even with budget cuts and all other financial recourse universities all
over the country are resorting to balance their budget, the UH Ilokano Program has proven to be a resilient program, with
students coming in knocking to get enrolled especially in its culture-oriented
courses.
The challenges are all over the place, including the onslaught of an
attitude that favors one national language, a thinking that has become rampant
since the 30s with the institution of a single language as a national language,
and giving it an army and a navy, and all the resources that are required to
develop and make that language dominant, and in the process, indirectly killing
the other languages of a country.
The UH Ilokano Program, together with other
advocates, has done its share to help avert a woeful condition in the homeland
with its advocacy for mother language education.
To this end, the UH Ilokano Program has been
instrumental in the putting up of the Nakem
Conferences, now a movement that has a country chapter in the
Philippines, the
Nakem Conferences Philippines.
In partnership with other educators, researchers, cultural workers, and
students, Nakem Conferences has since held six
international conferences, all meant to advance the cause of language and
culture rights, the right to be educated in the mother language, the right to
have access to one’s own language, and the right to preserve, promote, and
perform one’s own culture in one’s own language.
These tasks are no mean feat during the difficult times of
belt-tightening, cost cutting, recession, unemployment, and widespread poverty
even in a rich country like the
United
States.
But the UH Ilokano Program, with the help of
the community, has gone a long way to serve the new generation of Ilokano Americans, the new generation of students wanting to
specialize in studies on the Ilokanos and the peoples
of Amianan, and the new generation of students, who
despite the much-touted globalization, have refused to acknowledge that a
homogenized view of the world is the best view, but instead have found ways to
get to value otherness, difference, diversity, and multiplicity.
In all these, the UH Ilokano Program bears
witness to history, particularly to the Ilokano
American history in the islands.
Extend that logic to other Ilokanos in the
continental United
States, and that pride
could be the same—the pride that can only come from resisting the destructive
attack of similarity and sameness without any qualification.
The UH Ilokano Program remains steadfast to its
commitment to bearing witness to history, to history-making, to the reclaiming
of heritage, and to the struggle for a liberating education for all Ilokano and Ilokano-descended
people in Hawaii and all over the world.
No comments:
Post a Comment