Greek is the second fastest disappearing language in Australia

·

According to a report by the ABC, the Greek language is the second fastest disappearing language in Australia, behind Italian.

According to census data, in 2001 a total of 263,487 people spoke Greek as a second language in their homes. As of 2016, this number dropped to 237,583, which is almost a 26,000 person drop. Judging by statistics, this gap is only set to widen.

Antonia Rubino, a senior lecturer in Italian Studies at the University of Sydney says, “there are some factors that have helped the Greeks maintain their language more [than the Italians].” Italian has become a drastically disappearing language with the number of people speaking Italian in their homes dropping over 81,000 in 15 years.

Dr Rubino says these factors include, “the lack of this distinction between dialect and standard Italian.”

“Many post-war Italian migrants spoke dialect as their first language, and often did not pass on Italian to the second generation,” says Dr Rubino.

“The Greeks also had the church,” she says.

ABC NEWS: JARROD FANKHAUSER

The Greek Orthodox church is central to the family and has played a major role in the transmission of culture and language, whereas “Italians very often attended the local Catholic church which was mainly in English,” she says.

Though, Greeks are not too far behind Italians when it comes to language loss.

Statistically, it only takes three generations for migrant families to lose the language they came with, according to the ABC’s report.

“Australia is in many ways a graveyard of languages,” says Ingrid Piller, professor of applied linguistics at Macquarie University.

“Like the US, we’re an English dominant country where language diversity is not valued”, according to Dr Piller.

“Australia is one of the most multilingual countries in the world,” says Ken Cruickshank of the University of Sydney.

Yet, language education is not seen as a high priority and “languages are not part of the core curriculum in any state apart from Victoria in the primary schools,” he says.

In fact, he says, “we come lowest of all OECD countries in the provision and uptake of languages”.

“The result is that a bilingual child has a five in six chance of losing their heritage language by the time they finish high school”, according to Dr Cruickshank.

This statistic suggests that multilingual children often become monolingual throughout the education in Australia, as the education system does not encourage language learning.

According to the ABC report, there are two ways people can lose the languages they speak.

Firstly, linguistic colonisation, which happened to many Indigenous and minority languages that have been forgotten throughout history.

Secondly, via linguistic assimilation, where migrants lose their native languages as they are predominantly influenced by the dominant language in the country they live in.

Advertisement

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Advertisement

Latest News

Yiayia’s passion for science inspires granddaughter Voula Gaganis

It has been a few decades in the making, but Voula Gaganis has been guided by her yiayia’s own dream of a career in science.

From South Melbourne to European glory: Ange Postecoglou’s Greek Australian masterpiece

Ange Postecoglou’s Tottenham have done it—breaking a 17-year trophy drought with a 1-0 Europa League final win over Manchester United.

Koulouria Thessalonikis: Niki Louca shares her much-loved recipe

Niki Louca from My Greek Kitchen shares her favourite recipe for Koulouria Thessalonikis with The Greek Herald. 

Greece ranks second globally for Blue Flags, but two Attica beaches lose status

Just one week after the announcement of the 2025 Blue Flag Awards, two well-known beaches have had their Blue Flag status revoked.

Greek Government weighs up adding second, larger elevator at the Acropolis

The Greek government is exploring the installation of a second elevator at the Acropolis to enhance accessibility for visitors.

You May Also Like

$11 million capital raising under way for George Giannakodakis’ PointData company

George Giannakodakis' property technology company, PointData, intends to raise $11 million by June to accelerate their expansion plans.

Opinion: Nick Kyrgios is what tennis needs to survive

It is time to shine a light on why Nick Kyrgios' on-court attitude should be looked upon and admired by tennis players of the next generation.

‘Youth are key to our survival’: 65 years of the Panarcadian Association of Melbourne

Greek community hubs have been at the heart of the migrant Hellenic experience since the post-WWII era, offering cultural solidarity.