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Conferenza Lingua internazionale Fundapax
Agora' Internet - 13 novembre 1994
Sunday Telegraph Nov. 6

To: rebato-l@netcom.com

From: Don HARLOW

Sender: owner-rebato-l@netcom.com

Precedence: list

Jen mia reago al la menciita artikolo, kiun afable afisxis Edmundo antaux

semajno. Mi jxus telekopiis gxin al Londono. Cxu la moderna tehxniko ne

estas mirinda???

---

1994.11.12

Sunday Telegraph

Letters to the Editor

1 Canada Square

London E14 5AR

United Kingdom

fakso: +44 71 513 2504

Sir:

Joe Saumarez Smith's article "Pop Star's Words of Comfort for

Esperanto" (Nov. 6) seems to me to be a rather silly compendium of

errors and misrepresentations, coming from so reputable a journal as

yours.

Smith states that "Supporters of Esperanto ... have turned to Michael

Jackson ..." To the best of my knowledge, no supporters of Esperanto

turned to Michael Jackson; the idea of using Esperanto in his

promotional video was apparently the idea of his own creative staff,

and the first information those of us here on his own turf had about it

was an internet posting of a throwaway comment that appeared in your

own newspaper in September.

Smith advises us that "Esperanto has long been associated with

Marxism and anti-clericalism". This may come as a terrible shock to

the Catholic organization which publishes _Espero Katolika_, the oldest

extant Esperanto magazine, to the Vatican, which regularly broadcasts

in Esperanto, and to Polish Solidarity, which used Esperanto to keep

the outside world informed of events in that country during its struggle

with the Communist government in the early 1980's.

Smith also repeats the old chestnut about Esperanto enjoying "peak

popularity" in the 1920s and 1930s. A survey in 1928 showed that at

that time there were some 127,000 speakers of Esperanto in the world;

according to the 1994 _World Almanac and Book of Facts_, the number

of speakers today is approximately two million. Some peak!

Furthermore, to state that Esperanto has "lost many devotees to

Interglosa" (which in fact has not existed since about 1943; perhaps

Smith means Glosa, a language which has received some publicity in

Britain in the past two years, though, to the best of my knowledge,

nowhere else) is, aside from the fact that there is no evidence of this,

logically akin to suggesting that every time a British schoolboy learns

French, English has lost another speaker.

Try again, Mr. Smith.

Sincerely,

Donald J. HARLOW

---

Don HARLOW donh@netcom.com

Esperanto League for N.A. elna@netcom.com (800) 828-5944

ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/elna/elna.html Esperanto

ftp://ftp.netcom.com/pub/donh/donh.html

 
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