Bassa

Bassa (Vah) alphabet

The origins of the Bassa alphabet are obscure. Its name in Bassa is
Vah, which means ‘to throw a sign’. The alphabet fell out of
use in Liberia during the 19th century.

In the 1900s, a Bassa by the name of Dr Flo Darvin Lewis discovered
that former slaves of Bassa origin living in Brazil and the West Indies
were still using the Bassa alphabet. Dr Lewis had not encountered the
alphabet before and, after learning it himself, he decided to try to
revive the alphabet in Liberia.

Dr Lewis obtained a PhD in Chemistry at Syracuse University, then
returned to Liberia via Dresden, where he commissioned a company to
manufacture the first ever printing press for material written in the
Bassa alphabet. In Liberia he set up a school to teach the Bassa alphabet.

Originally the Bassa alphabet was written on slates with charcoal,
and the writing could be easily erased with a leaf known as yan.
People began to write with pencils in the early 1940s. The original
writing direction was boustrophedon (alternating between right to left
and left to right, but the alphabet has been written from left to right
since the 1960s.

Today the Bassa Vah Association
promotes the use of the Bassa alphabet.

Notable features

  • Bassa in a tonal language. Tones are marked using a system
    of dots and dashes which appear inside the vowel letters.

Used to write:

Bassa, a Kru language spoken by about 350,000 people in Liberia
and by about 5,000 people in Sierra Leone.

Bassa alphabet

Bassa alphabet

Bassa tones

Bassa tones

Thanks to Rev. Joseph Gbadyu, Varnie N’jola Karmo and Mattias Persson
for information on the Bassa alphabet.

Sample text

Sample text in the Bassa alphabet

Transliteration

Ɖé nì-díɖí kè ɓɛ̀ɖɛ̀ìn-dyí múɛ, ɖéɛ̀ nyɔǔn-dyù séín wóɖóɛ ɓɛ́ìn wɔ̃. Ké wa ɓéɖé hwìɖìi poìn hwòɖò-dyùà kè ɖɛ múin wɔ̃́-wɔ̃́ sɔ̀ɛ̀ìn ɖé dyɔún, ké wa ɓéɖé ɓɛ́ waà nyuɖɛ̀ ké gbo muìn ɓó ɖíí kà.

Sample text and transliteration by Peter Gorwor from Liberia

Translation

All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They
are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another
in a spirit of brotherhood.
(Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights)

Links

Information about the Bassa language and alphabet
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bassa_language
http://www.uniboa.org/bassalanguage.html
http://gwek.tripod.com/Bassa_Studies

Online Bassa dictionary
http://cefliberia.org/extras/Bassa%20Dictionary.htm

  • Categoria dell'articolo:Lingue
  • Tempo di lettura:4 minuti di lettura