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Be Pro-Active In Preserving
Culture, Minister Tells Dusuns
Bandar Seri
Begawan - Members of the Dusun ethnic group in Brunei have
been urged to take pro-active actions in preventing their culture
and language from extinction.
The Minister of Culture, Youth and
Sports, Pehin Orang Kaya Seri Dewa Major General (Rtd) Dato Seri
Pahlawan Hj Mohammad Hj Daud stressed that the nation's culture and
heritage needs to be safeguarded. "I believe, amongst the seven
ethnic clans in this country, there are those whose dialects and
languages face the threat of extinction. In this matter, I hope that all
ethnic clans, including the Dusuns, can act pro-actively through
strategic and insightful steps in protecting the culture and
language from extinction," said the minister before a congregation
of Dusun community at the International Convention Centre,
yesterday.
Pure characteristics in the culture
of ethnic clans can be accepted in the national culture, said the
minister - as long as it does not clash with the national
philosophy: Malay Islamic Monarchy (MIB).
He then rallied a call to preserve
the Dusun culture and language, saying that protecting the national
culture and heritage is in line with the proposals put forward by
world bodies such as United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organisation (UNESCO).
He said UNESCO, amongst other world
bodies, have proclaimed three important conventions: Convention
Concerning the Protection of the World Culture and Natural Heritage
1972; Convention for the safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural
Heritage 2003; and the Convention on the Protection and Promotion of
the Diversity of Cultural Expression 2005.
"For example, amongst the six
billion people in the world, there are 6,800 languages spoken in 190
countries and regions. From that number, only 3,000 languages can be
written, and the rest only exist in the oral form and are already
decreasing in speakers," the minister pointed out.
Pro-active actions to prevent
extinction of culture and language can be referred to specialist
institutions such as the Department of Language and Literature, the
Museums Department or Universiti Brunei Darussalam as responsible
bodies in handling such issues, he told the audience.
The latest
census information available states that the Dusuns make up about a
quarter of the population in Tutong District. Accurate statistics of the Dusun
population in Brunei are very difficult to obtain, as confusion
still arises on the use of the term 'Dusun' in naming other ethnic
groups, the PSJD official website states. In addition, Dusuns who
have converted to Islam are categorised as Malays. -- Courtesy of
The Brunei Times
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