<b>Light is fading for indigenous languages</b><br><br>September 23, 2012<div>AUS<br><br>IN DECEMBER 1992 the Keating government launched 50 dictionaries of Aboriginal languages.<br><br>A year in the making, the dictionaries were an attempt to preserve 100 or so remaining languages native to Australia. Once there had been 200.<br>
<br>Robert Tickner, the minister responsible, described the languages, with their wide regional variances, as ''precious national treasures'' that must be saved from extinction.<br><br>As with so many government initiatives on behalf of the Aboriginal community, it was an admirable exercise with results that didn't live up to the exuberant initial hopes.<br>
<br>Now, almost 20 years later, indigenous languages - in NSW at least - are in a weaker state than when Tickner spoke and, in some cases, critically endangered.<br><br>Access full article below: <br><a href="http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/light-is-fading-for-indigenous-languages-20120922-26dik.html#ixzz27DPoq6gr">http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/light-is-fading-for-indigenous-languages-20120922-26dik.html#ixzz27DPoq6gr</a></div>