The Sicilian Language - Linguistic heritage and legislative journey - Cademia Siciliana speaking

On December, 7th 2023 the member of European Parliament hon. @ignaziocorrao1984 organized a meeting about Sicilian language. This is the speak given by our co-founder, and president of the American section, Paul Rausch.

Пікірлер: 47

  • @caesarleo704
    @caesarleo70421 күн бұрын

    Bravissimu!!! A santa verita’ dicisti!!! Viva a Sicilia! A Sicilia ndo cori ❤

  • @Mimmo1701
    @Mimmo170115 күн бұрын

    Grazie mbari! iu sugnu tedescu terza generazione in germania. Ma me patri m'imparava a parrari sicilianu e me purtava in paisi (provincia di Agrigento) da quann'eru piciriddru. Me fici vidiri tutta la nostra cultura. Io amo a sicilia cu tuttu cori, e sugnu cuntentu che ci sunnu cristiani ca cummattunu pa lingua nostra. Grazie pu to travagghiu! VIVA LA SICILIA!

  • @jurabp
    @jurabpАй бұрын

    Bravo! È bello il siciliano! Ho capito tutto!

  • @r.m9437
    @r.m9437Ай бұрын

    Bravo!

  • @messengeroftruth17
    @messengeroftruth176 ай бұрын

    Yes, definitely preserve the Sicilian language.

  • @federicacalafiore
    @federicacalafiore6 ай бұрын

    Grazie, Paul. Quando si parla in Siciliano, come dici tu, la gente automaticamente pensa che tu sia ignorante. Io sono siciliana, nata in Sicilia, vivo in Sicilia, oltre al siciliano parlo italiano, inglese, tedesco e francese. Non sono ignorante. È semplicemente la mia lingua madre. I Siciliani devono essere considerati a pieno titolo bilingue!

  • @lorenzoemanueletomasello215
    @lorenzoemanueletomasello2155 ай бұрын

    Viva lu sicilianu!

  • @ericb8004
    @ericb80046 ай бұрын

    I learned so much from this. God bless Sicily

  • @glittermama
    @glittermama6 ай бұрын

    I learned Sicilian and English at the same time; both were my first languages. My grandparents were born in the 1880s, and some Sicilian words I know are even unknown to my grandmother's own family today. Medieval courtly Sicilian was the language of love poetry. It was transported to Tuscany and became the basis of Petrarch's sonnet form, which, in turn, influenced the English sonnet, which was a major source in the development of English poetry in the Renaissance and even to this day. I wrote a doctoral dissertation on an English sonnet sequence. Nowhere in my research, however, did I read that the love language of Petrarch originated in Sicily. Some sources said it derived from Arabic poetry and some said from the troubadours of "the south." There was no mention of Sicilian in the sources available to me--and they were considerable. Sicilian poetry continues to thrive today. It is quite beautiful; the Sicilian language is best realized, I believe, in its poetry. Paul Rausch, may your efforts continue. Thanks for your work; it would be tragic for the world to lose this amazing language.

  • @martyenmadrid
    @martyenmadridАй бұрын

    sono siciliana, ma purtroppo non ho mai imparato il "dialetto" ; lo capisco quando non è molto stretto e quando è la variante palermitana (sono di palermo); oggi vivo in spagna da ormai 2 anni, studio francese e arabo; malgrado mi definisca "poliglotta" è una tristezza non conoscere la lingua della mia terra. Ed è un peccato non averla imparata mentre vivevo lí perché è difficile poterla imparare da adulta e da lontano!

  • @scmasonry
    @scmasonry4 ай бұрын

    Beautiful, beautiful beautiful I’m in the same boat and I totally understand you and God bless you for understanding your ground

  • @redspuds
    @redspuds6 ай бұрын

    As an Australian born of Sicilian heritage, this is all I know and what makes up my culture and identity. It’s the gap of belonging between not feeling completely Italian and not feeling completely Australian.

  • @fenuccu
    @fenuccu6 ай бұрын

    YESSS, thank you speaker, I have always looked to the way the Irish have resisted colonialism + preserved their ancestral tongue by ensuring their children learned it in school! Would love to see Sicilianu on the curriculum, if not made the official language of the island, than a mandatory class all Sicilian children learn as they learn Talianu + Ngrisi. And ensure that it is not a standardized dialect, but true to the regions the classrooms inhabit. We have so little time to preserve this beautiful and unique language!

  • @analiagonzalez6075
    @analiagonzalez60758 күн бұрын

    Mi abuela era de castell di lucio

  • @adriana10677
    @adriana106776 ай бұрын

    I am 3rd generation born in America. My grandparents figured "we were in America now, no need to hold onto the language of the old world. " 😢 my grandmother was from palombara Sabina and grandfather's from Caltabellotta, Agrigento so listening to people on KZread and such is all i get now that their generation is gone to be able to hear and try and pickup some of the language. And i was unaware as well they spoke different languages until recently. I truly appreciate this video. As well as what you are trying to do. Even here IF and thats if they offer italian classes its italian as Americans know it so this was a wonderful video. Thank you for posting.

  • @PaulRausch

    @PaulRausch

    6 ай бұрын

    English subtitles should be available shortly!

  • @adriana10677

    @adriana10677

    6 ай бұрын

    Great KZread actually already translated or there are already. Wish I didn't need them. It's amazing how detached you can feel when you lose something such as language.

  • @MrJVivo

    @MrJVivo

    6 ай бұрын

    Thank You Paolo !!

  • @Venefica.

    @Venefica.

    6 ай бұрын

    yes...my parents always thought...we're in America now...SPEAK ENGLISH...although they spoke italian to each other they said we should SPEAK ENGLSH..!! that's what you call assimilation..!! I 'll go no further... lol

  • @adriana10677

    @adriana10677

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Venefica. yes! Lol kinda sucks cuz you have tuns of people around now in this great melting pot of a country and yet I feel more distant and disconnected from my culture than anyone else sometimes it feels.

  • @stephensamperi9251
    @stephensamperi92516 ай бұрын

    i listen to Sicilian music and translate the lyrics to learn. Now i started memorizing Sicilian prayers. I have noone to speak to so i’m not aiming to become fluent but i enjoy it.

  • @Thebasicmaker

    @Thebasicmaker

    6 ай бұрын

    If you want to learn Sicilia I'm from Palermo..we can get in touch

  • @Scaboid

    @Scaboid

    3 ай бұрын

    Are you still here, my brother?​@@Thebasicmaker

  • @familia250r

    @familia250r

    Ай бұрын

    @@ThebasicmakerI want to learn, I’m American, mi famigghia e di Milazzo.

  • @recyclespinning9839
    @recyclespinning98396 ай бұрын

    Wow, I had similiar existence here in the USA. I realized I was not speaking Italian. I was speaking Sicilian which we spoke at home and with other Sicilian s.!! I was always embarrassed to speak in front of other Italians. I realized, I'M NOT SPEAKING ITALIAN?? The older family members and parents spoke both languages. I finally took italian in high-school as a language course. Brought tears 😢to my eyes as this guy spoke I still understand what he said clearly, even though a came to the USA as small child some 50 years ago ..... PS, this is the reason why Italians loose their culture in one generation here in America. When we meet other Italians, we have a language barrier. Different regions in Italy have different distinct languages. At least for those of us grew up in USA.

  • @pow3redthebest
    @pow3redthebest6 ай бұрын

    ntirissanti pi daveru u to ntirbentu, grazzi Paul e grazzi Cademia 🙏 ❤

  • @_martymoon96_
    @_martymoon96_3 ай бұрын

    Fiera di essere Siciliana!❤ W la Sicilia!!!❤❤❤❤❤

  • @josephculmone2402
    @josephculmone24026 ай бұрын

    Even between regions in Sicily, the language changes quite a bit. Example: in Delia, Caltanissetta, we would say “yiddru” instead of of iddu (he in Eng). Would be interesting to zoom with the different Sicilian dialects.

  • @innertechnology7149
    @innertechnology71495 ай бұрын

    Paul that was superb. Bravissimo.. Where are you in the states?

  • @amirdaley2967
    @amirdaley29676 ай бұрын

    great way to start my morning, GJ Paul! everyone!

  • @pinspicola56
    @pinspicola566 ай бұрын

    Bravu Paolo w Sammrasi e la lingua sammrasisa.

  • @franckperon7024
    @franckperon70246 ай бұрын

    Nostro patrimonio, Sicilia libera

  • @Sceccu
    @Sceccu6 ай бұрын

    Great speech mbare! ANTUDO

  • @gianniinterrante2983
    @gianniinterrante29836 ай бұрын

    E prosita veru, bravu Paulu 😉, viva sammrasi e lu sicilianu.

  • @ornellagreco4918
    @ornellagreco49185 ай бұрын

    bravu picciottu

  • @carlosliboriocurreri7030
    @carlosliboriocurreri70306 ай бұрын

    natri in americanzuela venezuela parlamu sicilianu

  • @antoninoscro1834

    @antoninoscro1834

    6 ай бұрын

    Bonu faciti! Parrati sulu a lingua di nostri NANNI!!!

  • @claudioabbate4292
    @claudioabbate42926 ай бұрын

    Fantastic!

  • @tommytwogloves16
    @tommytwogloves166 ай бұрын

    Bravisimu!

  • @anlingitalia
    @anlingitalia6 ай бұрын

    Bravo Paul.

  • @josephculmone2402
    @josephculmone24026 ай бұрын

    Never feel embarrassed for being you. La lingua Siciliana e na lingua bedra!

  • @julia2k8
    @julia2k82 ай бұрын

    ....

  • @nurwer
    @nurwer2 ай бұрын

    Sicilia bedda

  • @dr-rexmangrca113
    @dr-rexmangrca1136 ай бұрын

    BACK IN 1960s MY FATHER GAVE ME BOOK LEARN ITALIAN IN 40 DAYS ... I LOOK AT THE BOOK THEN HIM ... I SAID YOU SPEAK ITALIAN ... WHY DID YOU NEED A BOOK ... MY FATHER SAID I SPEAK SICILIANO AND NO ITALIANO ... AT SAME TIME SPITTING ON THE GROUND .... BEING I LEARN SICILIAN BEFORE 5 YEARS OLD ... I DID NOT KNOW THERE WAS A DIFFERENCE ....

  • @winxinternetblog5567
    @winxinternetblog55675 күн бұрын

    nun sapia ca c’era na lingua accussi

  • @tizianoventi146
    @tizianoventi1466 ай бұрын

    Menchia

  • @antoninoscro1834

    @antoninoscro1834

    6 ай бұрын

    Cacinne'!