A heartbreaking video of a
Southern Mongolian girl has gone
viral on social media as China
pushes a sweeping ban of
Mongolian-language instruction
in schools across Southern
Mongolia starting this
September. In the video, a
Mongolian girl of 8 or 9 years
old is seen crying over a fear
of “becoming Chinese” under the
National Common Language Reform
policy instituted by the Chinese
government.
The following is an English
translation of the conversation
that transpires between the girl
and her mother:
Mother: “My darling, what makes
you so sad? Tell mommy, why are
you sad?”
Girl (crying): “I can’t learn
Mongolian anymore….”
Mother: “You’re sad because
you’re no longer able to learn
Mongolian?”
The girl nods.
Mother: “Darling, it is what it
is—we’re helpless. Mommy and
daddy will teach you Mongolian.
Many parents will teach their
kids Mongolian at home. From now
on, my darling needs to learn
Mongolian even harder, even
better. Will you?”
The girl nods.
Mother: “Don’t be sad. Is
anything else bothering you, my
darling?”
Girl (crying): “If I only learn
Chinese…what if I can’t speak
and write Mongolian anymore? I’m
afraid I’ll become Chinese.”
Mother: “My darling, your mommy
and daddy speak Mongolian at
home. You will not become
Chinese. You were born
Mongolian, in a Mongolian yurt,
to a Mongolian family. Your
blood is Mongolian. Your heart,
mind and everything is
Mongolian. That means you are
forever Mongolian. We’ll try to
find a private instructor for
you to learn Mongolian at home.
Don’t be sad, because this is
something we are unable to
change. I feel helpless, mommy’s
heart is breaking too. Anything
else bothering my darling?”
The girl shakes her head.
Mother: “Crying doesn’t help, my
darling …”
Since September 2020, China has
been aggressively enforcing a
new language policy called the
“Second Generation Bilingual
Education” as part of her effort
to “Firmly Inculcate the Chinese
Nationality Common Identity”
into the Mongolian population of
six million in the region.
The Government of China
initially claimed that this new
policy would shift the language
of instruction from Mongolian to
Chinese for only three subjects,
including literature, history
and politics. Yet
new
details leaked from a covert
recording confirm otherwise:
a comprehensive ban of Mongolian
language instruction across the
“Inner Mongolia Autonomous
Region” would be fully effective
starting September 1, 2023.