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Sinhala one of the world's most creative scripts

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  • Sinhala one of the world's most creative scripts

    Sinhala one of the world's most creative scripts

    RANDOM THOUGHTS By Neville de Silva

    Sunday Times
    11.29.2009

    Unknown to the media and most in Sri Lanka the Sinhala language has
    won international recognition.
    More precisely, it is the Sinhala script rather than the language
    itself that has been named as one of the world's 16 most creative
    alphabets
    among today's functioning languages, some of them among the oldest
    in the world. Though the elevation of the Sinhala script to this
    position of significance happened early last month it has gone unsung
    and unhonoured
    even by scholars and academics, leave alone the average Sri Lankan who
    seems to have more mundane matters to think about than the esoteric
    intricacies of script and sound.
    The individual responsible for gaining the Sinhala alphabet this
    eminence among the written scripts of the world is J.B. Disanayaka, a
    former Professor of Sinhala at the University of Colombo who made an
    irrefutable case for
    placing the Sinhala alphabet among the world's most creative ones.
    The nine international scholars who acted as judges at the first World
    Character Conference in Seoul, South Korea last month could not but
    agree with
    Disanayaka, currently Sri Lanka's Ambassador to Thailand, and
    recognize some unique features in the Sinhala alphabet and so place it
    on the world list.
    It is significant that of the 16 alphabets listed as the most creative
    in the world, 13 are what could be called Asian languages in that they
    originated in what is geographically the Asian continent. The three
    European languages are Greek, Italian (Roman) and Armenian. The Asian
    languages are Arabic, Burmese (Myanmar), Cambodian, Chinese, Hebrew,
    Indian Devanagari, Indian
    Tamil, Japanese, Korean, Laotian, Mongolian and Thai. The fact that in
    such a galaxy of Asian languages, some of the oldest languages still
    in use, the Sinhala script should find recognition speaks for its
    uniqueness. So Sinhala and Tamil, the two main languages in use in Sri
    Lanka, find themselves
    in the distilled list of scripts considered the most creative in the
    world.
    The founder of this World Character Conference is a Korean academic
    Soon Jick Bae who spent nearly 25 years travelling the world trying to
    identify countries that have created their own alphabets. He narrowed
    it down to 16 that included Sri Lanka. It was during his travels that
    he went to the Sri Lanka diplomatic mission in Chennai (Madras) last
    year to get a visa to go to Colombo and met Deputy high commissioner
    P.M. Amza.
    Amza suggested that instead of going to Colombo in search of an expert
    in the subject he should go to Bangkok and talk to Sri Lanka's
    ambassador there J.B. Disanayaka which he did. That is how Ambassador
    Disanayaka, still pursuing his love for linguistics and scholarship,
    found himself centre stage defending before the nine-judge
    international panel of scholars, Korean Soon Jick Bae's instinctive
    appreciation that Sinhala deserved a place among the select group of
    scripts.
    Once Soon Jick Bae identified what he thought were distinctive
    scripts, he
    had his impressions confirmed by scholars. He then invited the chosen
    scholars to attend the conference and convince the judges of the
    uniqueness of the respective scripts. Disanayaka in his presentation
    said that Sinhala has been in continuous use for 2500 years at
    least. Genetically Sinhala is related to classical Indian languages
    such as Sanskrit and Pali. Sinhala occupies a unique position within
    the Indo-Aryan family of languages.
    The official introduction of the script by the Buddhist monk Mahinda
    who brought Buddhism to Sri Lanka, goes back to the mid- 3rd century
    BC. That script was known as the Brahmi script and was one of the two
    ancient scripts used in India at the time. Historical and
    archaeological evidence points to
    the fact that writing existed in Sri Lanka before the introduction of
    the Brahmi script. Evidence of this is the discovery of several
    symbols in the earliest Brahmi inscriptions found here that do not
    rightly belong to the Brahmi script. For well over two millennia this
    Brahmi script passed through
    the evolutionary process leading to the eventual birth of the modern
    Sinhala script.
    The latest Sinhala alphabet is that which has been approved by the
    International Standards Organisation (ISO) and consists of 61 letters
    (though only
    58 are in use), a process in which Disanayaka played a leading role at
    a conference in Greece.
    So what is it that makes the Sinhala script unique and deserving of a
    place among the most creative alphabets in the world?
    Disanayaka in presenting the case in Seoul identified two unique
    features.

    Unfortunately limited space and my computer keyboard inhibit me from
    reproducing these particular Sinhala characters which would have shown
    more clearly the uniqueness. Suffice it to say that while the English
    letter =80=9Ca' stands for both the short `a' (as in at) and
    the long `a' (as in ass), the Sinhala alphabet has two sets of special
    characters to represent these two vowel sounds.
    As for the five consonant letters, they are not found in any other
    Indo-European or Dravidian language. But they are found in the
    Maldivian language Divehi which is an off-shoot of the Old Sinhala.
    The significance of the evolution of the Sinhala script is that it has
    a complete set of visual symbols to represent sounds. Apart from the
    fact that
    Sinhala has created its own alphabet, it has helped the evolution of
    other
    languages such as Thai. It happened in the 11th century during the
    Sukhothai period when Sri Lankan Buddhist monks resident in the then
    Thai capital city inspired the creation of the Thai script by King
    Ramkhamhaeng.
    It seems a curious coincidence that the Sri Lanka ambassador to
    Thailand is also accredited to Cambodia and Laos for the languages of
    all four countries are now recognized as among the most creative in
    the world. http://www.sundaytimes.lk/091129/News/nws_25.html
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