DUSHANBE, December 8, 2014, Asia-Plus – Radio Liberty reports Tajik state television began airing English-language films in their original versions and three channels are now showing Hollywood and Bollywood films without any translation help on Sundays and Thursdays. The films are reportedly already carving out a space for English in Tajik life that it has never occupied before.
Komron Safarov, the deputy head of the country''s Channel First (Shabakai Avval), says the new initiative is based on the idea that young Tajiks of earlier generations learned Russian precisely because films in that language were not translated when they were broadcast across the Soviet Union.
Now, as the number of people in the country who want to learn English increases, giving them the opportunity to hear English the same way should greatly accelerate their progress, Safarov says.
“It is through watching and hearing people speak that one accelerates the learning process for a foreign language,” he says.
Two other state channels -- Safina and Bahoriston -- are also now showing English-only films two days a week.
Professor Parvonakhon Jamshed, the chairman of Tajikistan’s Association of Teachers, says only 5 percent of the population speaks English today.
Still, interest among many young people is high. This year 1,000 Tajik secondary school students applied through the U.S. Congress-sponsored Future Leaders Exchange (FLEX) program to study for one year at a high school in the United States. One hundred of the applicants were accepted.
The interest in English in Tajikistan has already created a boom in English-language courses in state schools and in private training centers. But Professor Jamshed says that what has been missing until now is any integration of English into the Central Asian country’s public life.
“Currently, there are a lot of language centers and most institutions of higher education include study of the English language,” he notes. “But because few people ever communicate in English, the only way for them to develop their fluency is viewing movies.”
Ironically, most foreign movies shown on Tajik television today are dubbed or voiced over into Russian, because they come to Tajikistan via the Russian market. The translation causes no concerns because Russian has been the country’s second language for more than a century and remains widely understood.
However, Tajik President Emomali Rahmon has said that every citizen of the country should know both English and Russian, as well as their mother tongue.
The initiative to begin broadcasting English-only films came direct from the presidential office, Safarov says.
The heads of state television have announced that they will increase the broadcasting hours for original-version movies in both English and Russian in the future, though they have yet to provide further details.




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