Language Sells — When We Honour It, the World Buys It

George Sarfo Kantanka

Language is more than a tool for communication. It carries our tribe, our traditions, and our values. The way we use it tells the world exactly who we are.

When we reduce our mother tongue to a weapon for insulting other tribes, we shrink its power. A language that only excludes will never attract new speakers or earn respect beyond its own community.

A language grows when it is lived. When families speak it at home, when parents pass it on to their children, when the youth embrace it with pride, it becomes vibrant. People are drawn to learn languages they hear spoken with dignity and purpose.

The world’s most influential languages did not spread by accident. They grew because their speakers used them boldly — in public and in private — without fear, apology, or inferiority. They spoke well of themselves in their own words, and that confidence became contagious.

Pride in one’s language is not arrogance. It is trust in one’s identity. It is confidence in one’s story.

Developed societies understand this. They speak their languages freely, without glancing over their shoulders. They know that when a people honour their own tongue, they honour themselves.

To sell your language, speak it. Speak it with love. Speak it with purpose. Speak it so well that others will want to buy into it.

Director of Education

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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