Yes because you guys want ethno lingual homogeneity and if it goes against your lenses oh they are indian troll, they are not Bangladeshi there is even a school in Sylhet about our ethno lingual heritage. InshaAllah slowly but surely we can raise awareness and save this language from gradual extinction. You can twist it however you guys want it. It bothers us shows your ethnofascism we can love our regional culture and ethno-lingual heritage and still be a proud Bangladeshi origin. Most people don’t know about this lost heritage even many Sylheti Bangladeshis. But slowly they are learning more about it.
https://www.dhakatribune.com/opinion/heritage/2017/06/22/british-schools-enlist-sylheti-syllabi
you cannot silence us and make us less Bangladeshi just because goes against your view how Bangladeshi society should be, no matter how much you want to twist it otherwise. No
Matter how much irrational emotional breakdown you may have over it.
I honestly believe
@UKBengali is one of the most
patriot Bangladeshi in this forum .TBH I have high respect for him. That's why I have asked him a question .
You saw that I did not even talk to trouble makers who are trying to push the matter, I am safely ignoring them in every other threads.
And he is also for Sylheti language recognition and preservation. So your emotional breakdown should stop. Because it goes against your view of what Bangladesh should be.
As long as Allah keeps me alive, I cannot in good conscience let this language go under extinction in Sylhet Division in Bangladesh. My goal is to raise awareness and bring this language to be practiced both in written and oral form in Sylhet Division in Bangladesh. Bengali is already is a official language so it will continue to be taught there as well. Because otherwise it will be complete go into extinction.
https://www.soas.ac.uk/endangered-l...ebration-of-sylheti-culture-and-language.html
The SOAS Sylheti Project is proud to announce a celebration of Sylheti culture and language. The evening will kick off with poetry readings of original works from the Sylhet region. This will be followed by a brief history of Sylheti society in Bangladesh and here in London. Our storytellers will wow you with traditional tales told in Sylheti and English with presentations from the SOAS Sylheti Project and the Surma Community Center including youtube videos and a language taster session. To top off the evening we will launch the inaugural version of our long awaited Sylheti dictionary Android application.
The SOAS Sylheti Project is a student-led initiative that works together principally with the Surma Community Center in Camden to document the Sylheti language as spoken by the various generations of members this local community. For three years now the Project has been working diligently to create documentation material in Sylheti - academic essays, animated stories, electronic dictionary, teaching materials, etc. Sylheti is an under-described and under-studied language, spoken by 7 million people in Bangladesh and by approximately 400,000 people in the UK. Despite being spoken by 10,300,000 people worldwide there are no comprehensive dictionaries or grammars of the language, mainly due to the dominant political history that views Sylheti as a ‘dialect’ of standard Bengali. This June, during Endangered Languages week, the SOAS Sylheti Project in conjunction with the Surma Community Center will celebrate Sylheti culture and language with an evening of entertainment and education. he evening will kick off with poetry readings of original works from the Sylhet region. This will be followed by a brief history of Sylheti society in Bangladesh and the migration here in London. Storytellers from the Surma Community Center will wow you with traditional tales told in Sylheti and English. Presentations from the SOAS Sylheti Project and the Surma Community Center will be both educational and entertaining including youtube videos and a Sylheti language taster session. To top off the evening we will launch the beta test version of our long awaited Sylheti dictionary Android application. A ‘talking’ dictionary app to show that Sylheti is significantly different from Bengali in terms of vocabulary and pronunciation and inspire the younger generation of Sylheti speakers in the UK to take pride in their heritage, language and identity. The app is developed with financial support from the SOAS Alumni & Friends Fund