 |

|
|
 |
 |
Ancient Tribes
Timelines of European tribes and migrations
Historyworld
A History of the Germanic Peoples
The Celts
Celtic culture in the European Middle Ages
Minority Languages
A guide to Europe's lesser spoken tongues
Wikkipedia
European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages
The Celts
Knud Mariboe's online encyclopedia
Celtic Cornwall
All things Cornish including a history of its people
TIME is not responsible for the content of external internet sites
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
E-mail your letter to the editor
|
 |
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
| Photograph for TIME by BALAZS GARDI |
| YOUNG ONES
Rusyn performers
relax before their
appearance at the
Annual Festival of
Rusyn Culture in
Mikova, Slovakia |
|
 |
The Lost Tribes of Europe |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
As national borders blur, the Continent's original minorities are fighting to reclaim their ancient cultures and identities |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
By JAMES GEARY |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
When John Angarrack accompanied his two young sons on a school trip to a local-history exhibit in their hometown of Bodmin, Cornwall, in southwestern England, he was shocked to see 10th century King Athelstan portrayed as a benevolent monarch who gently persuaded the indigenous Cornish people to pledge their lives and land to the English crown. Angarrack had been taught that Athelstan was an expansionist tyrant, and that Cornwall became part of England only after centuries of strife. So he led a protest at the next town council meeting with 40 demonstrators waving banners demanding: we want our history back!
That was eight years ago, and Angarrack is still fighting to reclaim Cornish history. His group, Cornwall 2000, is waging a campaign to get the Cornish recognized as an ethnic minority within Britain, a designation he says would revive Cornish culture and language with the help of state funding. "The English national curriculum does not include Celtic history [of which the Cornish are a part] because it doesn't want to suggest that the concept of the 'English people' is fairly new," he says.
Angarrack isn't out for independence, but he does want some form of Cornish government — like the Scottish Parliament or the Welsh Assembly — in the hope that increased local control will spur growth in an economy driven primarily by tourism. And if the Cornish aren't granted status as an ethnic minority, he plans to ask the courts to review the decision. "If Cornish people want to be English, that's up to them," Angarrack says. "But many of us don't and I'm going to do my best to get the state to accept that."
Angarrack's campaign may seem like a lone, eccentric quest — his Celtic rallying cry is heeded by only a few — but it is emblematic of an identity crisis that's playing itself out all across Europe. The recent London terrorist bombings, some of which were carried out by young men who were born and raised in Europe, have opened a fierce argument about multiculturalism, which pivots on whether Europe has been too tolerant of extremism masquerading as cultural diversity. As those questions are debated across the Continent, another, less obvious clash is taking place. This time, the conflict is not between national identities and the cultures of relatively new immigrants to Europe — like those who have arrived from Asia or North Africa — but between the idea of a nation and the cultural survival of Europe's oldest minority groups.
In Eastern and Central Europe, the fall of communism and the enlargement of the European Union have unleashed a new pride and interest in cultural roots, especially those minority identities that were suppressed under communist rule. There has been a similar resurgence in Western Europe, albeit for different reasons. For many in the west, a bigger E.U. is a blander E.U. — and a potentially threatening one. When the French and Dutch rejected the proposed European constitution earlier this year, many of those who voted no saw the poll as a way of preventing "non-European" Turkey from joining the club. The fear is that as old borders erode — due to globalization, mass tourism and possible further E.U. expansion — long-cherished ethnic and regional differences will be gradually sanded out of existence.
Continued ...
|
|
 |
 |
Leaving War Behind [Feb. 14, 2002]
Ethnic tensions remain, but it seems that peace is winning the day in Macedonia
The Importance of Being British [June 3, 2001]
In the wake of ethnic riots in Oldham, Britain grapples with issues of race and identity
Looking Back in Anger [Feb. 28, 2002]
The Hungarian Prime Minister's comments about the postwar expulsion of Hungarians from Czechoslovakia has raised a storm in Central Europe
Learning from Past Mistakes [Aug. 13, 2001]
South Africa is a fitting venue for an international conference on racism
Drawing the Lines [Nov. 19, 2001]
There is often more to a map than meets the eye. A British Library show reveals some hidden agendas
Language Lessons [Apr. 19, 2002]
The European Human Rights Court slaps Latvia's wrists for barring Russian-speakers from running for election
Vanishing Tribe [May 21, 2001]
Despite centuries of harmony, Morocco's Jewish communities are an endangered species
3 Lessons from London [July 18, 2005]
As investigators unravel the plot, here's what the attacks reveal about how al-Qaeda operates today — and why the bombings may be a sign of things to come
Face-to-Face-to-Face in the Aegean [Jan. 21, 2002]
VIEWPOINT: Ancient enemies face each other across Cyprus's Green Line, but for how much longer
A Long, Hot Summer [Jun. 25, 2001]
In a spate of rioting, Algeria's Berbers rise up against joblessness, corruption and police brutality
A Class Apart [Feb. 12, 2001]
A segregated school raises questions about the limits of Swedish liberalism
Living in the Past [April 23, 2001]
Genetic research is uncovering signs that our ancestors aren't what we thought they were and that most Europeans may be cousins
Search all issues of TIME Magazine
Indicates premium content |
|
|
 |
|
|
|