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<td><span class="Title-new"><span id="lblTitle">Learning Hakka language and culture on the rise</span> </span></td></tr></tbody></table>
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<p>Learning Hakka language and culture are becoming increasingly popular in Taiwan. That's what Taiwan's top official in charge of Hakka affairs said on Sunday. Council of Hakka Affairs Chaiman Lee Yung-teh was overseeing the 2007 nationwide Hakka language proficiency test. The one-day test was being held simultaneously in all major cities and counties nation-wide. Lee said the number of people attending this year's test increased by some 2,600 people over last year's 5,000.
<br> <br>According to Lee, only 11.6 percent of Hakka children under the age of 13 could speak their mother tongue in 2002. But he said that in 2004 the percentage rose to 13.8 percent. That he said is thanks to the establishment of the Council of Hakka Affairs and the launch of a TV channel that uses Hakka exclusively. Lee said that the council has been trying to prevent Hakka language and culture from further waning while also helping to enrich the country's cultural diversity. In 2004, about
3.8 million people in Taiwan identified themselves as Hakka. By the following year, almost 4.5 million identified themselves as such.</p></td></tr></tbody></table></td></tr></tbody></table><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Forwarded from edling-list @
<a href="http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu">ccat.sas.upenn.edu</a><br>-------------------------------------------------