Chapter 1: | The Dying Gael |
The same holds true for children from a group which is not the dominant one:
Just so we are not under the illusion that this resocialization is an entirely gentle process, Dorian (1981b) wrote of other aspects of persuasion besides the lecture and instruction that are often employed:
Such has been the fate of Gaelic speakers in Scotland, and, as a matter of fact, of non-English speakers, in general. Matheson and Matheson (2000) wrote the following:
Those who have not been killed or deported have been demoralized to such an extent that the culture and the language of the Gael in the British Isles lie languishing on its death bed. The point of this gloss on the historical circumstances surrounding the experiences of the Gaels and the Gaelic language is not to drum up past injustices, but