
But Childs, almost Don Quixote style, works to save a language its speakers aren't interested in saving.
Kim and Bom die as they become socio-economically irrelevant, stigmatised and to the children, what they like to call "the monkey language."
War and peace threaten the continuance of language and traditions, they say. War destroys and isolates communities and peace prioritises one language over another in the effort to unify people with a common tongue.
But we can only hope and carry on like Childs does to save that piece of history that will help us to understand (if later on) ourselves that little bit more. Even if it takes recording the last 20 speakers where the last of a language and culture live only in anecdotes or socialising.
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