Sunday, May 22, 2011

Hiking and politics in the Basque region's Grand Canyon

Filed under: Hiking, History, Learning, Europe, Spain, Luxury Travel
"The Basques have the oldest history in Europe," says Dr. Alberto Santana, historian and co-founder of Aunia, a Basque cultural magazine. "We have been here since the Stone Age and have the most distinct language in the world. There are some 6,000 languages in 12 language families. Basque is in a family by itself."

The Basque language, Euskara, is the heart of Basque identity, he tells our hiking group. In Euskadi a Basque is a Euskaldunak ("one who owns the Basque language") and the Basque region is Euskal Herria ("the land of those who speak Basque"). Yet only 28% of Basques can actually speak it. At a corner shop in Orduña, where we're staying as we tour Spain's Basque region, I only find books in Spanish, including a cookbook on Basque cuisine.

The Basques straddle the border of Spain and France, an independent people who have never had independence. Santana's statement that they can trace their heritage back to the Stone Age isn't nationalistic chest thumping; it's the prevailing opinion among archaeologists and linguists. The theory is borne out by the language itself. For example, the word for "knife" is aizto, which translates literally as "stone that cuts".

Gallery: Nervion: The Grand Canyon of Spain's Basque regionContinue reading Hiking and politics in the Basque region's Grand CanyonHiking and politics in the Basque region's Grand Canyon originally appeared on Gadling on Sat, 21 May 2011 14:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.Permalink | Email this | Comments



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