When Westerners, especially those who haven't been in Belarus speak about Belarusian language, they often assume that people who speak it get repressed by the government and that it's not present in schools, literature, press, television and the internet at all. They are actually wrong.
I have not said that the language has been repressed by the government. The government is just allowing it to stagnate.
The Belarusian language is definitely not banned.
Indeed, I didn't claim it is. Like its close relative though in Ukraine it has experienced its fair share of persecution in the past due to its status in the 19th century as a peasant language. The damage has already been done since then, the problem is that the Belarusian establishment (who are Russophiles) don't really care about it and it is generally in their interest for it to be in decline.
It is a compulsory subject in all Belarusian schools, even those where Russian is dominant, along with Belarusian literature. There are subjects in universities taught in Belarusian - for example, I study in a foreign language department in a local university, and we have linguistics, one of the core subjects, taught entirely in Belarusian. Originally students leaving school chose between exams in Russian and Belarusian, but from what I've heard, from this academic year on, both Russian and Belarusian language exams are compulsory, along with English and mathematics.
Yes, and that is the wrong way to go about it. It's quite effective for killing languages outright in some cases. The policies of successive Irish governments over the 20th century are singularly responsible for the decline of Irish. Never teach kids and young adult students language that you want to preserve and spark interest in by forcing them to learn out of textbooks and complete exams in them. That is just silly.
There are newspapers published entirely in Belarusian, both local and nationwide, and many newspapers, both state-owned and private carry both Russian and Belarusian articles.
Given that much of the press is allegedly controlled by "the opposition" as you've said in the past that is to be expected.
There are Belarusian language programs on state television.
Just like there's Breton programs on French TV. Not nearly enough though, clearly.
Local news bulletins broadcast on the main state television channel, Belarus-1 and others are entirely in Belarusian.
When you say "local news", by local do you mean "rural"? Would local news bulletins in, say, Minsk broadcast entirely in Belarusian?
Main news programs broadcast on the same channels are dominantly Russian but segments dealing with local events and culture are mostly in Belarusian.
Local events and culture. There's that "local" again. Is "local" exclusive to more rural, outback areas where the majority of Belarusian speakers are?
Books in Belarusian are published by state-owned publishers.
I'd be surprised if they weren't. Clearly not enough are.
A lot of encyclopedias and other history books published in Belarusian, and they are not in any way inferior to books in Russian in any way - they haven't been made as throwaway in order to comply with the bilingualism laws. I'm not talking about fiction books by local writers.
Yeah, that's basic stuff. It would be a problem if it wasn't but that's nothing to really celebrate, not enough people are reading it.
Announcements on public transport are made in Belarusian. The absolute majority of road signs, as well as signs on state-owned institutions are in Belarusian.
Etc., etc., etc.
Across the board? In every city and town the announcements on public transport are in Belarusian?
But, I need to say one very important thing: the shrinkage of use of the Belarusian language happened not because of repression, but because of lack of interest among the public.
The lack of interest stems from successful Soviet policies of Russification in the country, imposed after the Second World War. The policy is known as the "rapprochement and unification of Soviet people" policy. It's not as though the Belarusian people, uniquely in the world, simply thought their language was vulgar and didn't need to bother with it anymore. That came right from the top as part of Soviet policy. Even though books were printed as you say not nearly enough was done to protect the language, rather, the opposite occurred.
The nationalist movement had been well and truly crushed in the early 1930s, unlike in Ukraine, though Ukrainians are obviously struggling to restore their language in spite of that. It's also interesting that at the same time Soviet-linked philosophers and academics reformed Belarusian grammar to make it as close to Russian as possible, thereby making Russification easier. The association of the language with Belarusian nationalists and Fascists didn't exactly help activists post-war either.
The same thing happened with newspapers and many television programmes - lack of interest. The Russian language publications were more interesting, so people read and watched them. All of that coupled with the dominant usage of Russian in official documentation resulted in the Belarusian language gradually falling out of use in cities.
Look at your last sentence. "The dominant usage of Russian in official documentation".
The language policies set by Lukashenko are pretty much the same as those in Belarusian Soviet Socialist Republic during the late Soviet Union. He isn't interested in intensively promoting the Belarusian language, not because of malicious intent, but because he apparently thinks that the current policies are fine and shouldn't be changed.
But given the preference among Belarusian opposition activists to speak in Belarusian and the association with Belarusian nationalism it is well within his interests as a Russophile and proponent of greater integration with Russia to oppose the growth of the Belarusian language. Lukashenko is, as you say, merely carrying on the traditions of the Russophile political establishment in Belarus.
Westerners, who know that he is apparently a dictator that longs for the time of the USSR and that Belarusian is falling out of general use immediately arrive at the rather incorrect conclusion that he enforces Russian by using political and cultural repression.
Statements I have not made, but thank you for pigeon holing me as an idiot Westerner, as you often do. Besides the bit about Lukashenko being a dictator who longs for the time of the USSR though, that's pretty much indisputable.
The Belarusian authorities before Lukashenko came to power in the beginning of the 1990s tried to make Belarusian the dominant language as quickly as possible - it was set as the sole language used by the government, in official documentation, educational establishments and the media and Russian was simply removed out of those spheres. Quite a lot of people who suddenly found that they should use only Belarusian didn't really like it.
This is why I said "there are ways of doing things". The early 1990s policies were foolish and ill conceived, you should never force something through like this.
I don't know what you'd think of it Guardian, but whenever I speak to you about Belarus and I feel the 1984 stuff coming off you in waves (
he loved big brother) I always listen to
this song.