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(SFIFF) Speaking in Tongues (4/09) | Print |  E-mail
By Karyn Smoot   
Apr. 27, 2009
For one minute, just forget every language you know except for English. You are now at the level of most Americans. How do you think you would fare in the global community? Now, are you more likely to vote to make English the U.S.’s  official language?

In the documentary Speaking in Tongues, it is viewpoints like this, along with those of non-English speakers, that local filmmakers Marcia Jarmel and Ken Schneider weave into the stories of four San Francisco students enrolled in bilingual education.

With a focus on the families of the four students, the film manages to communicate the impact that expanding linguistic horizons has on youth in a rapidly assimilating country. The filmmakers capture intimate footage of the students — who themselves make up a cross-section of San Francisco’s cultural and racial patchwork — experiencing the unique opportunities provided by living within two cultures at once.

Durrell, a resident of public housing, delves into a new culture armed with Mandarin skills; Kelly bonds with her Chinese-speaking grandmother through the language that her parents have forgotten; Jason becomes the first in his family to graduate from elementary school, reading and writing both Spanish and English; Lowell’s own, junior Julian Enis, takes his Chinese skills to Beijing and beyond.

What is most shocking about this movie is the stark contrast between joyful, globally educated children and Middle-Americans pushing for English as the country’s official language. This film stands to make it all the clearer that bilingual education belongs in schools, both for students to preserve their mother tongues and for others to adopt a new one.


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