Central Library’s Big Language Celebration: A World of Languages on Your Doorstep!

On 13 September we were delighted to celebrate Manchester’s linguistic diversity with a wonderful event supported by Nottingham Trent University and the University of Nottingham. The celebration was part of a project promoted by Natalie Braber, Professor of Linguistics at Nottingham Trent University.

A group of Manchester residents from Hong Kong attending a session of Central Library's conversation club. They are sat around a big table on the library's ground floor, with various books lying in front of them.
A group of Manchester residents attending Central Library’s Conversation Club

When we say “heritage”, what do you think about? Perhaps it’s grade-listed buildings, ancient books, or museum objects. But what if we told you that the language you speak, whether it’s English, Urdu, Hungarian, ‘Manc’, or more, is also part of your heritage? At Manchester Central Library we had a wonderful opportunity to explore this topic with the help of Prof Natalie Braber as part of a project sponsored by Nottingham Trent University and the University of Nottingham.

In March 2025 Prof Braber approached Manchester Central Library to engage our community groups in a project exploring language as heritage. After consulting with our contacts at Migrant Support and the Hungarian consulate, we decided to focus on how migration to the UK influences immigrants’ perceptions of their native language. We developed this idea through two workshops with Migrant Support, where artist Sophie Gardiner encouraged participants to express their relationship with their native language through art. You can see the group at work in the photo below!

A group of Manchester residents of different ethnicities attending an art workshop led by Migrant Support. They are sat around a big table and they are engraving letters into pieces of wood, which then get stuck to a piece of paper of compose words.
A group of Manchester residents attending an art session led by Migrant Support

On 11 September Prof Natalie Braber also visited the library and led a session with our Conversation Club, a group that meets in the library twice a month to practice their English. Finally, the project culminated with a language celebration on 13 September, where representatives from the Hungarian, Portuguese, and Romanian Consulate, Colibri Mexican Folkdance, the Chinese Music Classroom at Chetham’s School of Music, and others, shared their linguistic heritage through language-themed activities.

Staff from the Chinese Music Classroom at Chetham's School of Music teaching a young girl how to write her name in Chinese. An adult is helping the girl hold a calligraphy brush. Lying on the table are red pieces of paper with Chinese characters written in black ink.
A Chinese calligraphy workshop led by Chinese Music Classroom at Chetham’s School of Music during Manchester Central Library’s Big Language Celebration

The event’s opening speech was delivered by staff from the Portuguese Consulate, who, together with the Hungarian, Greek, Romanian and Czech consulate, kindly donated a collection of books in foreign languages to the library. We also had performances by Neysa Killeen (Irish storytelling), Eugénia Azevedo and José Dias (Portuguese poetry), Mandy Kotsopoulou, Iason Andreadakis, Doreta Boultouka, Spyros Pantos (Greek poetry), Dr Szilvi Naray and Zotmund Jakab (Hungarian prose and poetry), and more.

To relive this wonderful event, watch this wonderful video made by Yellow Jigsaw!

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