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While Manchester champion this event, several of our sister Cities of Literature are joining us.
To join the global conversation this IMLD, use hashtag #MotherLanguageDay
Manchester is a city full of languages with the densest multilingual population for a city of our size. This year, over 25 events spanning from 1st February – 31st March will showcase a huge variety (not including the languages participants will bring themselves) of languages in libraries, museums, language centres, theatres and other community spaces, allowing people in Manchester to engage with languages and practitioners from all over the world.
Manchester City of Literature have an IMLD exhibition running for two whole months throughout February and March, celebrating our connection to diverse languages at home and through our global UNESCO Cities of Literature network.
This exhibition includes:
In 2020 Angoulême, a city with a rich history of celebrating comic books and graphic novels, launched a competition to find visions of how cities would function and the hopes and fears of a post-COVID world from other UNESCO cities. For International Mother Language Day, we have collated ten entries from our sister UNESCO Cities of Literature along with a brief insight from the artists about their work.
On the screen in The Manchester Histories Festival Hub, where our exhibitions will be displayed, we will have a playlist of films from Manchester and other sister UNESCO Cities of Literature. From Manchester we will have the ‘Made in Manchester’ poem based on Zahid Hussain’s poem, comprising of 65 languages, and different translations of Manchester Multilingual Poets, Anjum Malik’s ‘This Here’ and Ali Al-Jamri’s ‘In Prisms of Knowledge’. Outside of Manchester, we will be playing films from Nottingham, Tartu and Reykjavik, all UNESCO Cities of Literature.
And from Monday 20th February – 31st March, the very special
‘Words From the Childhood Home’ is a brand new, exciting, multilingual chain poem written by nominated poets representing UNESCO Cities of Literature to celebrate International Mother Language Day 2023.
Manchester City of Literature invited our fellow UNESCO Cities of Literature to nominate a poet to respond to Anjum Malik, a Manchester Multilingual City Poet who writes in Urdu and English.
Anjum started the chain poem with a four-line stanza on the theme of ‘Childhood Home’, reflecting on the power of family (and all the forms that this takes), native languages and memory. Each participating poet was tasked with producing a four-line stanza (in their mother tongue and with a translation into English) in response to the words of the poet that responded before them. Together, members of the Cities of Literature network (Bucheon, Dunedin, Edinburgh, Heidelberg, Lviv, Melbourne, Montevideo, Nottingham, Seattle, Tartu and Wonju) have produced a stunning poem which captures the rich nuances of international poets’ lived childhoods.
“Globally, some languages are under threat and 40% of the World’s population doesn’t have access to education in a language they understand. Here in Manchester, we want to celebrate multilingualism and promote the importance of multilingual education. These events and those of our past celebrations allowed me to honestly champion our multilingual strengths at the UNESCO Creative Cities Network Conference last year and I will confidently say again what I said there; “all these initiatives say to people: your language, your culture is important to our city. They help promote equality through creativity and self-expression.”” – Councillor Luthfur Rahman OBE, Deputy Leader, Manchester City Council
“Globally, some languages are under threat and 40% of the World’s population doesn’t have access to education in a language they understand. Here in Manchester, we want to celebrate multilingualism and promote the importance of multilingual education. These events and those of our past celebrations allowed me to honestly champion our multilingual strengths at the UNESCO Creative Cities Network Conference last year and I will confidently say again what I said there; “all these initiatives say to people: your language, your culture is important to our city. They help promote equality through creativity and self-expression.””
– Councillor Luthfur Rahman OBE, Deputy Leader, Manchester City Council
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