Celebrating Mother Tongues in Swansea

February 21st celebrates the importance of the mother tongue throughout the world. And Swansea is blossoming with languages from around the world. A brief survey of members of Swansea Women's Asylum and Refugee Support group revealed 33 different languages! The Kenyan poet Hannah Sabatia shared her poem 'The Sound of My Language' with the group and the names, countries and poem were combined in an image to illustrate the individual significance of each of those unique and beloved languages. Hannah's poem appeared in the anthology My Heart Loves in My Language: Stories and Poems from Swansea, H... Mehr ...

Verfasser: jeni Williams
Dokumenttyp: Dataset
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Schlagwörter: Sociology of migration / ethnicity and multiculturalism / Mother tongue / languages / languages exhibit iconicity / Asylum / Refugee / Poetry / women / Hannah Sabatia
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29242380
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://doi.org/10.21954/ou.rd.19204046.v1

February 21st celebrates the importance of the mother tongue throughout the world. And Swansea is blossoming with languages from around the world. A brief survey of members of Swansea Women's Asylum and Refugee Support group revealed 33 different languages! The Kenyan poet Hannah Sabatia shared her poem 'The Sound of My Language' with the group and the names, countries and poem were combined in an image to illustrate the individual significance of each of those unique and beloved languages. Hannah's poem appeared in the anthology My Heart Loves in My Language: Stories and Poems from Swansea, Hafan, 2017 --- This material is part of the Covid Chronicles from the Margins project, funded by The Open University and The Hague. The project aims to highlight the impact of the pandemic on refugees, asylum seekers & undocumented migrants. This item can also be found on the Covid Chronicles website.