Language Trends
Pryce Quintos
BAGUIO
CITY -- There are about 9.1 million speakers of the Ilokano language, the third
most spoken language in the Philippines, mostly from the Northwestern area of
Luzon. These speakers have migrated to different places in the country and the
world. Ilokano language, then, is used not only nationally but also
internationally.
In
a move to broaden the discourse on Ilokano language, the Nakem Conferences International
and Nakem Conferences Philippines held the 9th Nakem International Conference
and 1st International Congress on the Ilokano Language Oct. 23-25 here at
Supreme Hotel.
With
the theme “Panapagpapapaang (maipapapan) iti Ilokano ken Panangitag-ay iti Disikurso nga Ilokano”,
the conference and congress was attended by participants from Spain, the
Mainland United States, Japan, Hawaii, Thailand, and the Philippines.
The
conference aimed to “discuss the repertoire of the Ilokano language as used in
all the domains of Ilokano life, in both the private and the public spheres;
synthesize the repertoire and formulate it as the basis for an intellectualized
form of the language for the production of knowledge in both academic and
non-academic settings; propose alternative forms of teaching Ilokano in all
levels of academic life of the Ilokano students in order to prepare them for
the professions; and establish the Academia Ilocana (or Ilocano Academy) that
will oversee all efforts at developing the Ilokano language in all Ilokano
communities all over the world.
One
of the highlights of the conference and congress was the founding of the
Academia Ilocana, or the Academy of the Ilokano Language.Among the invited
keynote speakers wereDr.ItaruNagasaka of Hiroshima University, Japan; Dr. Alvin
Gaerlan of California, United States; Dr. Julius Soria of the University of
Hawaii; Dr. Aurelio Agcaoili of the University of Hawaii; Sra. Milagros Delia
Caguioa Guran of Spain; Mr.Josefino C. Jimenez from Thailand; Chancellor RaymundoRovillos
of University of the Philippines Baguio; Dr. Miriam Pascua of Mariano Marcos
State University, and Dr. Francis Bringas, Department of Education Baguio
Schools Division Superintendent.
“These
speakers are experts in their own fields and they represent the variety of
domains of knowledge and cultural practice in which Ilokano serves as the
mediating instrument,” according to an earlier event announcement on panitikan.com.ph. “The
fields cover tertiary education, the various social and public service
professions, translation, heritage and foreign language education, second
language acquisition, applied and theoretical linguistics, philosophy of
language and indigenous studies, diaspora and exilic communities, religion,
mass and social media, politics and public governance, business and
entrepreneurship, research and knowledge production, cultural criticism,
creative writing, entertainment, law and jurisprudence, medicine and public
health, and cross-cultural relations.”
The
event was sponsored by the University of Hawaii Ilokano Language and Literature
Program and co-sponsored by the following universities: Mariano Marcos State
University, Abra State Institute of Science and Technology; Apayao State
College; DepEd-Region I; Divine Word College of Bangued; Don Mariano
Marcos Memorial State University; Ifugao State University; Ilocos Sur
Polytechnic State College; Kalinga-Apayao State College; North Luzon
Philippines State College; Provincial Government of La Union; Nueva Vizcaya
State University; Philippine State College of Aeronautics; PLT College; Quirino
State University; Saint Louis University; Saint Mary’s University; University
of Northern Philippines; University of the Philippines-Baguio; and University
of the Philippines-Diliman.
The
Nakem Conferences is a “cultural advocacy group of academics, creative writers,
philologists, linguists, and advocates of emancipatory education.”
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