Ishkashimi
[aka Ishkashmi, Ishkashim, Eshkashimi]Classification: Indo-European
·threatened
Classification: Indo-European
·threatened
Ishkashmi, Ishkashim, Eshkashimi, Eškāšmī |
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Indo-European, Indo-Iranian, Iranian, Eastern Iranian |
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ISO 639-3 |
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isk |
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Information from: “The Effect of Accessibility on Language Vitality: The Ishkashimi and the Sanglechi Speech Varieties in Afghanistan” (157-233) . Simone Beck (2012)
1,500 in Afghanistan (survey conducted by Beck in 2007) and 1,000 in Tajikistan (Müller et al. 2005)
All are bilingual in Ishkashimi and Dari, but Ishakashimi is used at home and in the community together with Dari. The older generation uses mainly Ishkashimi and some Dari within the family. The younger generation uses Ishkashmi and Dari to a similar extent at home. Children tend to speak Dari among each other.
Dari (one of the national languages of Afghanistan)
"In the Ishkashim area Ishkashimi and Dari are used to a similar extent in the primary domains of the family and the community. Ishkashimi is used occasionally in the secondary domain of travel and trade. It is very sporadically spoken in the secondary domains of education and religion, but not enough and not in a structured enough way to be even considered here and to impact the vitality of the language. People mainly use Dari in the remaining secondary domains of media and administration."
No scripts were developed for Ishkashmi spoken in Afghanistan.
The Ishkashimi-speaking villages are located mainly in Ishkashim town of the Badakhshan province, Afghanistan. "Ishkashim town lies north of the mouth of the Wakhan corridor, near to the Panj river, which marks the border to Tajikistan. A few partly Ishkashimi-speaking villages are located some kilometres north of Ishkashim town. Ishkashimi is also spoken in Tajikstan, in the villages of Ryn and Sumjin, across the border from Ishkashim."
Information from: “The Red Book of the Peoples of the Russian Empire” . Andrew Humphreys and Krista Mits ·
Ishkashmi is still commonly used as a language for everyday communication. According to T. Pakhalina, Ishkashmi is surviving, although its sphere of use is narrowing.
Tadzhik
"All the Ishkashmis, except young children, speak Tadzhik."
"There is only one Ishkashmi village (qishlaq) on the territory of the former Soviet Union, which is Ryn in the Ishkashmi District of the Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Region of Tadzhikistan (the biggest village -- Nyut, marked as Ishkashim on the maps). The village is situated on the right bank of the River Pyandzh where it turns sharply from the west to the north. Due to a forced resettlement in the 1950s, some families live in Tadzhik villages (Nyut, Sumdzhin, Mulvodz and others), and in a Wakh village, Namatgut. "
Information from: “EŠKĀŠ(E)MĪ (Ishkashmi)” . Steblin-Kamensky, I. M. (1998)
Like other Pamir languages it was not written until recently. For centuries the sole literary language in the region has been Persian, in which works by Ismaʿilis, the predominant religious group there, and some folk tales have been written. In the early 1990s attempts were made to introduce a script for Eškāšmī based on the same Cyrillic alphabet adopted for Tajik.
On the right bank Eškāšmī is spoken by about one thousand people, mainly in the village Ryn (Ran in Wāḵī) in the former Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous Oblast of Tajikistan. There are also some Eškāsmī-speaking families in the neighboring villages of Nūd (Nad), Sumǰin, Mulvoǰ, and Namatgut. On the left bank, in the northeastern Afghan province of Badaḵšān (q.v.), there may be more than a thousand Eškāšmī speakers, but their exact distribution is not known.