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- From: nyt%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (NY Transfer News)
- Subject: Edit'l:In Defense of Spanish/ed-lp
- Message-ID: <1992Dec23.012431.1426@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 01:24:31 GMT
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-
- Via The NY Transfer News Service * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- From el diario/La Prensa 12/21/92
-
- Translated and edited by Toby Mailman. "el diario/La Prensa" is
- a Spanish language newspaper published in New York City.
-
-
- A New Cultural Order for Puerto Rico?
-
- The Defense of Spanish: The Battle Begins
- byline Edgardo Martinez
-
- The New Progressive Party (PNP) in Puerto Rico will take power
- next week, or to be exact, on January 2, 1993. During the past
- electoral campaign, those supporting statehood promised that they
- would carry out reforms in many orders. Some of those changes are
- directly or indirectly related to the question of culture. One of
- the most heavily emphasized changes was the annulment of the law
- which makes Spanish the country's only official language, and the
- reinstatement of the old law which North Americans imposed in
- 1902, four years after the invasion.
-
- The triumph of the PNP was solid, and new legislative leaders are
- already anticipating that the annulment of the Spanish law will be
- the first legislation to be approved in January. But already the
- first winds of protest and oppositon have begun to blow, and what
- is coming will be a virtual storm. The following is the prelude.
-
- The law which declared Spanish to be the official language of
- Puerto Rico was signed by Governor Rafael Hernandez Colon last
- April 5. This was the fruit of years of efforts by various
- intellectual and cultural groups to have acknowledged what was
- more than obvious: that Spanish is the natural language of Puerto
- Ricans, who think, speak and feel in that language; that it is a
- fallacy to say that Puerto Rico is a bilingual country when studies
- show that such a condition does not exist among its population. In
- fact, after the Spanish law was signed, a study was published
- which concluded that some 60% of the Puerto Rican population
- cannot speak English.
-
- The news of the Spanish law went around the world. In Washington
- it upset some; in the Spanish world it provoked admiration. In
- fact, shortly afterward, the government of Spain announced that it
- would confer the "Prince of Asturias" rize on the Puerto Rican
- people for reaffirming its culture and identity through the
- official recognition of its language.
-
- But none of this pleased the PNP, which is lookig for a way to
- make Puerto Rico a state of the United States union. They raled
- against the law; they said it was an attempt to separate Puerto
- Rico from the United States, which would affect the allocation of
- federal funds, that Puerto Ricans are North American citizens and
- have to know English, etc. When the draft became law, they swore
- that they would annul it when they came to power and that English
- would once again become the official language along with Spanish.
-
- The promised will be carried out, they say. And the reaction has
- not been long in coming.
-
- In an editorial published last week, the newspaper ABC from Madrid
- described Governor-elect Pedro Rossello's promised as "mindless"
- cultural "aggression" and pointed out that the PNP "couldn't
- begin" its mandate "in a stupider and more frivolous way."
-
- Already, yesterday [Dec. 20], statements of discontent and
- disagreement began arriving here [el diario/La Prensa] via news
- agencies. "Defenders of Spanish Willing to Fight Against PNP," was
- the headline which the Spanish agency EFE put on one of its
- dispatches transmitted from San Juan. Professor Pedro Juan Rua, of
- the group Accion Nacional Pro Defensa del Vernaculo [National
- Action in Defense of the Vernacular], and the representative of
- the Popular Democratic Party, Hector Lopez Galarza, who was the
- author of the Spanish law, made it known that they would fight
- against the annulment of the law.
-
- Rua said the elimination of the Spanish law would constitute "a
- step backward" because, according to him, it would take away from
- the country a "legal shield" against the growing threat of the
- "English Only" movement in the United States. Rua did not hesitate
- to say that [the growth of the "English Only" movement] was made
- patent by the election of Bill Clinton as President of the United
- States, "since as governor of Kansas, Clinton approved laws in
- favor of `English Only.'"
-
- Our dear friend Awilda Palau, who for years wrote a weekly column
- for el diario/La Prensa, also let it be known, and no less
- importantly, since she was one of the main promoters declaring our
- vernacular the official language. Palau confirmed that she will
- look for the path of consensus for this thorny problem and that
- she will propose to Rossello that he not alter the Spanish law,
- but that he present laws which stipulate adding the use of English
- when necessary.
-
- "Everything in Spanish and when it is necessary, also in English,
- but there should never be the use of both languages
- indiscriminately, as the 1902 law stipulated, which was so fought
- against," said the intellectual, adding "To annul the Spanish law
- would be like annuling themselves."
-
- But the changes which the PNP has announced which will effect the
- cultural life of the island don't stop there. A reform is
- anticipated in the law which governs the University of Puerto Rico
- -- traditionally a bastion of opposition and cultural
- reaffirmation -- in order to be able to have more direct control
- over the institution and thus make it respond better to the
- policies of the pro-statehood government.
-
- There are other questions. What are the plans for the celebration
- of the 500 Anniversary of the Discovery of Puerto Rico? What will
- be the policy in regard to the Instituto de Cultura
- Puertorriquena, which, under previous PNP governmentshas seen its
- autonomy violated? Why did the PNP legislators in the Senate
- eliminate the cultural commission?
-
- And maybe the most important of all the questions: How will the
- Rossello-Romero Barcelo government confront the opposition of a
- patriotic people who are ready to struggle not to be dishonored?
-
- We'll see this all begin on January 2, 1993. (edlp 12/21/92)
-
-
-
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