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Sharing his happiness over the successful outreach program, Vijay Swami, Executive Director, Research Institute of World’s Ancient Traditions Cultures and Heritage (RIWATCH) shared that the RCML is created not only to document the mother languages but also to promote them. Our team is putting all effort to contribute as much as possible in the process of language documentation and promotion of indigenous communities, he added.
RCML’s Coordinator and first author of the aforesaid book, Dr. Mechek Sampar Awan spoke about how a language becomes endangered and how to revitalize and protect it from the endangerment. He urged the native speakers of Ashing (Adi) to let their children acquire the language in a natural setting by regularly conversing in it.
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Dr. Kaling Dabi, a representative from the Tribal Health Collaborative (THC) at Piramal Foundation, addressed the implications of language extinction and emphasized the importance of community ownership in preserving one’s own language.
Dr. Kombong Darang, Research Officer, RCML’s stressed upon the importance of community participation in the process of language documentation. He said that the documentation of language is a two-way process. The researcher and the community members have to coordinate each other for a successful documentation of any language, he added.
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During the program, Gommang Tamut donated traditional attires worn bt the Ashing (Adi) community to the RIWATCH Museum located at Roing, Lower Dibang Valley.
Dugbang Lipir, Tailyang Nampi and native speakers of Ashing (Adi) viz. Gommang Tamut, Chitut Dawa Danggen, Dongkong Sibo and Nuni Sibo also spoke during the program. The program was attended by the Ashing native speakers from Nyereng village and Kugging village. After the formal program, RCML team elicitated linguistic and cultural data from the native speakers for compiling children’s illustrative pictorial glossaries of the Ashings (Adi).