The Prague Post - Last fluent speaker on a quest to keep ancient S.African language alive

EUR -
AED 4.302663
AFN 76.74015
ALL 96.411485
AMD 444.279233
ANG 2.097242
AOA 1074.348762
ARS 1680.363188
AUD 1.739245
AWG 2.108864
AZN 1.994559
BAM 1.953601
BBD 2.360833
BDT 143.388611
BGN 1.967536
BHD 0.441691
BIF 3470.908181
BMD 1.171591
BND 1.503008
BOB 8.099849
BRL 6.299668
BSD 1.172181
BTN 106.470928
BWP 15.664369
BYN 3.378982
BYR 22963.190106
BZD 2.357437
CAD 1.621102
CDF 2524.779654
CHF 0.926641
CLF 0.026289
CLP 1038.029699
CNY 8.155678
CNH 8.156389
COP 4302.083371
CRC 571.554256
CUC 1.171591
CUP 31.04717
CVE 111.07018
CZK 24.336822
DJF 208.735061
DKK 7.470416
DOP 74.326026
DZD 152.071362
EGP 55.627511
ERN 17.57387
ETB 182.066086
FJD 2.656044
FKP 0.869816
GBP 0.871968
GEL 3.157406
GGP 0.869816
GHS 12.705941
GIP 0.869816
GMD 86.113238
GNF 10265.445873
GTQ 8.979271
GYD 244.987512
HKD 9.135425
HNL 30.988826
HRK 7.533686
HTG 153.446635
HUF 385.037044
IDR 19874.992514
ILS 3.712067
IMP 0.869816
INR 107.195332
IQD 1535.565113
IRR 49353.285043
ISK 146.190901
JEP 0.869816
JMD 184.573044
JOD 0.830669
JPY 185.392021
KES 151.076874
KGS 102.45564
KHR 4720.666574
KMF 492.068319
KPW 1054.468854
KRW 1722.045917
KWD 0.360358
KYD 0.976796
KZT 595.467239
LAK 25348.361331
LBP 104968.306434
LKR 363.019859
LRD 216.656501
LSL 19.264335
LTL 3.459405
LVL 0.708684
LYD 6.370829
MAD 10.740965
MDL 19.96844
MGA 5313.166529
MKD 61.555717
MMK 2459.980518
MNT 4177.669534
MOP 9.414264
MRU 46.852066
MUR 53.89315
MVR 18.101067
MWK 2032.612222
MXN 20.60753
MYR 4.753153
MZN 74.876225
NAD 19.264335
NGN 1662.827557
NIO 43.00089
NOK 11.703395
NPR 170.524341
NZD 2.007194
OMR 0.450471
PAB 1.172176
PEN 3.935271
PGK 4.907504
PHP 69.466581
PKR 328.016264
PLN 4.224114
PYG 7828.189092
QAR 4.265745
RON 5.092948
RSD 117.430939
RUB 91.443523
RWF 1709.583099
SAR 4.393567
SBD 9.52529
SCR 16.687663
SDG 704.716502
SEK 10.68967
SGD 1.504793
SHP 0.878997
SLE 28.293647
SLL 24567.683577
SOS 669.556255
SRD 44.884796
STD 24249.575138
STN 24.837736
SVC 10.256412
SYP 12957.302082
SZL 19.268313
THB 36.542521
TJS 10.931287
TMT 4.10057
TND 3.386778
TOP 2.820911
TRY 50.721354
TTD 7.943026
TWD 37.068561
TZS 2961.194793
UAH 50.732998
UGX 4051.549407
USD 1.171591
UYU 45.006128
UZS 14146.965383
VES 406.343045
VND 30777.118495
VUV 141.563885
WST 3.259808
XAF 655.22232
XAG 0.012364
XAU 0.000241
XCD 3.166285
XCG 2.112513
XDR 0.814883
XOF 656.682377
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.2491
ZAR 19.20715
ZMK 10545.728618
ZMW 23.472481
ZWL 377.251931
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    84.04

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    17.26

    +1.04%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    23.46

    -0.09%

  • RIO

    0.5500

    85.68

    +0.64%

  • BCE

    0.2500

    24.39

    +1.03%

  • NGG

    -0.8900

    80

    -1.11%

  • BCC

    -1.6900

    83.82

    -2.02%

  • CMSD

    0.1000

    24.02

    +0.42%

  • GSK

    -0.5700

    47.65

    -1.2%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    13.5

    +0.22%

  • RELX

    -1.3400

    40.29

    -3.33%

  • JRI

    -0.0300

    13.67

    -0.22%

  • BTI

    -1.9000

    56.32

    -3.37%

  • BP

    -0.2300

    35.15

    -0.65%

  • AZN

    -4.4870

    89.94

    -4.99%

Last fluent speaker on a quest to keep ancient S.African language alive
Last fluent speaker on a quest to keep ancient S.African language alive / Photo: RODGER BOSCH - AFP

Last fluent speaker on a quest to keep ancient S.African language alive

In her humble home on the red soil of the Green Kalahari, 92-year-old Katrina Esau listened intently as her two great-grandchildren practised the ancient N|uu language of South Africa's indigenous San people.

Text size:

As the young children enthusiastically sang out phrases, Esau interjected occasionally to correct their pronunciation of the distinct sounds and deep clicks of her mother tongue, of which she is the last first-language speaker.

Visitors to the family home near the banks of the Orange River in the Northern Cape province also chipped in, with pride, a few words of N|uu in homage to the matriarch’s efforts to keep alive a language that researchers say is 25,000 years old and endangered.

On the walls, photographs of the quietly dignified and graceful Esau wearing a crown and collar of animal hide, feathers and quills denoted her status as a queen in the N||ǂe house of the San people, among South Africa's oldest cultures.

Better known as "ouma", or grandmother, Esau is determined to keep N|uu alive.

She was born in 1933 on a farm near Olifantshoek in the southern Kalahari Desert, about 150 kilometres (93 miles) from the border with Botswana.

Her parents worked for a white family that spoke Afrikaans, the language of the Dutch settlers.

"We grew up hard. On the farm, my mother worked in the kitchen, washed laundry, ironed and washed floors," she said.

"I was born into the language, I drank the language. As children, we never spoke Afrikaans; we only spoke N|uu," Esau told AFP.

But if the farm owner ever heard them, he would chase them away, saying: "You’re talking an ugly language -- go home!" Esau recalled.

Her father warned the children not to speak N|uu at their employer’s home, fearing "they’ll kill us", she said.

As they grew up, they dropped N|uu altogether, speaking only Afrikaans.

- 'A wound' -

Nǀuu is part of the Tuu language family originally spoken in South Africa and Botswana, many dialects of which are already extinct, said Pan South African Language Board representative Bradley van Sitters.

Their loss was a "systematic and deliberate" aspect of the oppression of the San and Khoekhoe peoples who were forced into servitude, he said.

"The languages of these natives were strictly forbidden... and forced them to operate within an economic system dominated by the colonial languages," van Sitters told AFP.

There are oral history accounts of inhumane punishment of parents who taught their children indigenous languages, he said.

For Esau, not being able to speak her mother tongue was "a wound". She still finds there are words in N|uu for which she cannot find a match in Afrikaans, she said.

"It was bitter and is still bitter when I'm the only one that can speak the language," the soft-spoken woman said.

As part of her quest to revive N|uu, she and her granddaughter, Claudia Snyman, established a school for the language, which uses special characters in script to denote the verbal clicks.

They authored the first N|uu children’s book, "!Qhoi n|a Tijho" ("Tortoise and Ostrich") published in 2021, contributed to the first-ever N|uu dictionary and are working on a language app.

"It was difficult to learn the language, but I persisted," said Snyman, 33. "Once I heard it for the first time, I was interested and knew I'd take it further."

"We’re trying everything to save the language," she said.

- 'Living human treasure' -

Esau never went to school but in 2023 was awarded an honorary doctorate in literature from the University of Cape Town for her efforts to save N|uu.

Even though the government has honoured her as a "living human treasure" and invites her to celebrations of South African heritage, she struggles financially.

For N|uu to survive, she said, the government would need to pay stipends to those willing to put in the work required to keep it alive.

Esau's son, Prince Charles Tities, is proud.

"I'm glad that she’s trying with all her might and energy to take this language forward," he told AFP.

"It makes me feel heartbroken to think that one day, when she is no longer here, what will happen to the language?"

S.Danek--TPP