DutchNews, June 9, 2016
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| Photo: Depositphotos.com |
A member of the
Frisian national party – Fryske Nasjonale Partij – has caused shockwaves by
suggesting the party drop its Frisian-only language rule, the Leeuwarder Courant says on Thursday.
The FNP currently only communicates in Frisian but
Friesland provincial councillor Johannes Kramer told the paper that Dutch
should also be considered acceptable.
‘People should stop looking strangely at
an FNP member who talks Dutch,’ he said. ‘Dutch is also part of Friesland but
has been a blind spot.’
‘As a party we want to win over people in Dutch
language areas,’ he told the Volkskrant later in an interview. ‘And there are a
lot of voters who tell us they like our ideas but that they can’t read
Frisian.’
Native tongue
Kramer and two other party stalwarts have now drawn up
a position paper calling for change which will be discussed by the membership
later in the year. The paper is entitled ‘From party of language to party of
action’.
Frisian is the native tongue of around half the 350,000 people who
live in the province of Friesland.
The FNP was founded in 1962 to promote the
Frisian language, culture and sports. The party has five members on the 43-strong
provincial council

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