foca wrote:007 wrote:
As long as Swedish is one of the national languages, and services are being provided in Swedish, I really don't see what they really lose out other than not being able to force their language on other people. And, removal of compulsory Swedish does not mean banning it from being taught at schools that it should cause a 'deep resentment' in them. People who wanna reap the benefits of the Swedish language will learn it at their will, with taxpayers money.
And, I definitely think there's already a split in the society regarding compulsory Swedish, now only growing louder.
As long as .... See my statement above about resentment ....
Why should they have resentment.. It is easy - they struggled for this status quo , they have reached a compromise , and now there's an attempt to go back on the arrangement . the mind of a person works in a simple way : So first goes mandatory swedish in schools, then goes public services in swedish, then swedish as the second state language ...after that Ålands might go to....civil war or not , Swedish speakers will feel cheated. Civil wars happen in present day Europe , it is enough to look at former yougoslavia and Ukraine (there the language is one of the main topics of propaganda and political manipulation ). People are the same now as they were in the 18th century...
and that slippery slope of yours all hinges on the arrangement that
forces minority language on above 90% of population. No wonder there's a vocal resentment towards such arrangement which has been growing by the day, as I understand.
As for status quo, today's parliament voting result has stirred it a bit. Changes in compulsory Swedish in parts of Finland are now only a matter of time.
My personal view is that let people (parents and/or students) choose either Finnish or Swedish as their compulsory language studies at schools, while making both (Finnish, Swedish) languages available for optional studies, along with other few major languages of the world.
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The legislature did however approve a motion allowing more flexibility in language teaching in Eastern Finland – where schools have long argued that Russian would be more useful to learn than the minority Swedish language. That motion was narrowly approved by a vote of 93 to 89. Unusually, it was filed jointly by the prime minister’s National Coalition Party in partnership with the main opposition Centre Party.
http://yle.fi/uutiset/swedish_remains_o ... ls/7850431