By Karen Breytenbach
Bakgat! Afrikaans celebrates its 80th birthday as an official language, although birthday bashes are few.
"That fact that few people are celebrating this day is a good sign. It is no longer a privileged language, but has a rightful place among the 11 official languages of South Africa. Its future is safeguarded," director of the Woordeboek van die Afrikaanse Taal Institute Willem Botha said on Wednesday.
During the last census in 2001 it was determined that, of the 5,2 million Afrikaans mother-tongue speakers, 2,9 million were coloured, 2,5 million white and 213 000 were black, said Botha.
"The future of Afrikaans looks brighter today than it did 10 years ago. The Afrikaans book and music industries are at a peak. You find that for the first time Afrikaans-speaking rock and pop groups have Afrikaans names and Afrikaans teenagers love it."
Controversial writer and self-styled conservative Dan Roodt said: "Each time a new book is written or published in Afrikaans, we spit in the faces of our former British and current Afro-Imperialists."
But Afrikaans lecturer at the University of the Western Cape Annemarie Swarts believes Afrikaans has a bright future for speakers of different races.
"Contrary to Dan Roodt's ideas about the puritanical use of Afrikaans, I think we should make it inclusive.
"Few people still consider it to be the language of apartheid, compared to 10 years ago, when I really struggled to make my students enthusiastic about the language," she said.
Swarts said many students want to learn Afrikaans because they want to work in the Western Cape.
Klein Karoo National Arts Festival chairperson, Karen Meiring, believes the festival plays an important role but is merely a platform to "demonstrate the language".
"We don't fight for the language, we live it," she says.
Botha attributes a revival in Afrikaans to the fact that speakers worldwide are cherishing their minority languages in the face of global homogenisation.
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