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January 08, 2018

Language and Identity: Catalan Case

Language functions as a carrier for culture. The very concept of a culture is rooted in its language. On language, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, one of the most prominent poets and philosophers of the Romantic period, said that it is the armoury of the human mind that contains the trophies of the past and the weapon of its future conquests. Language is the mold that surrounds our cultural identity. The culture is carved in our language – the primary method of identity.
      
John E Joseph, Professor of Applied Linguistics at the University of Edinburgh, in his book ‘Language and Identity’ (2004) defines linguistic identities as ‘double-edged swords’. While acting in a constructive manner to give individuals a sense of belonging by representing an ‘us’ opposed to a ‘them’, it also becomes easy for linguistic identities to demonise themselves. A language’s cultural allegiance also gives rises to regionalism, which often converts itself into a political ideology, and, on occasions, separatism.
      
Catalan case  

On one day towards the end of the summer of 2012, an unwonted development occurred in Catalonia, an autonomous region of Spain. Under the slogan ‘Catalunya, nou estat d'Europa’ (‘Catalonia, new state in Europe’), up to 2m Catalans gathered in central areas of Barcelona, bringing the city centre to a standstill for hours.

The rally – the largest ever organised in Catalonia since La Transición (the Spanish transition to democracy) following the death of the Spain’s military dictator Francisco Franco in 1975 – marked the culmination of a series of protests called ‘Marxa cap a la Independència’ (‘March towards Independence’) that had begun in June that year to demand independence of the region from Spain.

This was not the first time Catalans poured into the streets en masse as part of their independence movement. The political movement started in nineteen-twenties, though the movement in modern days had its seeds sown in 2010 when the Constitutional Court, Spain’s highest judicial body, annulled parts of constitutional regulations granting Catalonia powers of self-rule. The move has since prompted protests on various occasions over these years.

The issue significantly escalated in the second half of 2017, with unprecedented events such as independence referendum held in October and the Constitutional Court declaring it illegal, the imposition of Spain’s direct rule on Catalonia, arrests of several regional government officials, and regional elections in December in which pro-independence parties won a majority.                            

Catalan separatist flag outside the regional government headquarters in Barcelona (pic courtesy: Reuters/Juan Medina)

The separatist sentiment in Catalonia has long been fuelled partly due to the perception that Spain threatens Catalan linguistic identity by attempting to ‘hispanicise’ the region. Catalan language was banned for around forty years during the dictatorship of General Franco, who came into power following the end of the Spanish Civil War in 1939. The tyranny of military rule not only impacted Catalonia politically but culturally as well. As democracy returned in Spain in the nineteen-seventies, Catalans have contributed by letting flow their time and money into safeguarding the centuries-old language.  

Death of linguistic identities and cultures occur in severe cases of marginalisation. Fortuitously, it is not the case with Catalonia. Catalan ideologies about their identity can be viewed in two ways: language-and-identity and language-and-territory, with the former sharing more an emotional link with language and the other implying that Catalan language should be the one practiced as the main language in public settings. Catalonian’s law mandates the use of Catalan language at schools, hospitals and public sector offices.

In comparison with majority of socio-political and cultural movements that are based on race and ethnicity, language has played a crucial role in firmly determining a Catalan identity. Conversely, a pivotal part of the Catalan identity is not only the local language, but the fact that Catalans are amicably bilingual in both Spanish and Catalan. The Catalan Institute for Statistics suggests that more than fifty percent of Catalans adjudge Spanish to be their native language despite the fact that over eighty percent of the regional population can speak Catalan.

Amid an unceasing, heated pro-independence movement and nationalist parties coming back in power in regional parliament, the time may be ripe for Catalans to realise that secessionism is bad not just for Catalonia but also Spain, as well as Europe. There are constructive social elements such as pluralism and integration that Catalans ought to hold in high regard rather than embracing separatist groups. Multiculturalism and multilingualism can not only aggrandise socio-economic opportunities but also counter marginalisation and culture decay of the region.