The following may be of interest. Dr. Tuchscherer is seeking to help find
funding for preservation of the manuscripts and teaching of the script. There
is also interest in encoding Bamum in Unicode to facilitate digitization and
use on computers and the internet.

Don Osborn
Bisharat.net


"African Script Facing Extinction:
Case of the A-ka-u-ku and Sh�mom of the Bamum"
by Dr. Konrad Tuchscherer  
http://yaounde.usembassy.gov/wwwhkonrad.html

Press Release - December 14, 2004

On December 14, Dr. Konrad Tuchscherer, a professor from St. John's University
in New York met with the press at the American Embassy to shatter the myth of
Africa as an historically illiterate continent. Dr. Konrad revealed that
Cameroon has the historical distinction of possessing one of Africa's few
original script traditions. The script, known in its modern form as A-ka-u-ku
(after its first 4 letters), was invented by the Bamum around 1896 during the
rule of Sultan Ibrahima Njoya, the seventeenth king of the Bamum, who reigned
from 1889-1933. 

After eight months of research on the script, supported by a Fulbright grant
from the U.S. State Department, Tuchscherer revealed that there remain today as
few as three people who can read the thousands of books and other documents
written in the script that are held in the palace archives in the Bamum capital
at Foumban. Only one man, a traditional healer, survives today who uses the
script as his only means of writing. This man, who visits the palace archives
to consult books on ancient Bamum medicinal remedies, is, as Tuchscherer says,
a living national treasure for all of Africa.

Tuchscherer also revealed that a nearly 100 year-old invented spoken language,
known as Sh�mom, is today thriving among the Bamum. Outside scholars have for
over twenty years believed that Sh�mom had fallen into extinction. 

Tuchscherer says that unless urgent measures are taken now to teach the script
in schools, the ability to read the history of the Bamum as recorded their
novel script will be lost forever. As Tuchscherer says, quoting the words of
African sage Amadou Hampate Ba, "When an old African dies, a library burns."
 
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