30 Jun, 2010 @ 11:05
1 min read
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Catalonia is a ‘nation,’ at last

MADRID’S Constitutional Court has given new powers of self-rule to the Catalonia region.

The court has declared that Catalonia can now call itself a ‘nation.’

It insisted that the word carries no legal value, but instead should be understood as a historical and cultural term.

One of the most contentious requests, however – that Catalan be recognised over Spanish as the ‘preferred language’ – was not approved.

In response to this, local politicians have called for a day of protests on July 10.

Catalan, which was banned by General Franco in the 1940s, is now the main language taught in the region’s schools.

Castilian Spanish can only be taught up to four hours per week in Catalonia.

Jon Clarke (Publisher & Editor)

Jon Clarke is a Londoner who worked at the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday as an investigative journalist before moving to Spain in 2003 where he helped set up the Olive Press.

After studying Geography at Manchester University he fell in love with Spain during a two-year stint teaching English in Madrid.

On returning to London, he studied journalism and landed his first job at the weekly Informer newspaper in Teddington, covering hundreds of stories in areas including Hounslow, Richmond and Harrow.

This led on to work at the Sunday Telegraph, Sunday Mirror, Standard and even the Sun, before he landed his first full time job at the Daily Mail.

After a year on the Newsdesk he worked as a Showbiz correspondent covering mostly music, including the rise of the Spice Girls, the rivalry between Oasis and Blur and interviewed many famous musicians such as Joe Strummer and Ray Manzarak, as well as Peter Gabriel and Bjorn from Abba on his own private island.

After a year as the News Editor at the UK’s largest-selling magazine Now, he returned to work as an investigative journalist in Features at the Mail on Sunday.

As well as tracking down Jimi Hendrix’ sole living heir in Sweden, while there he also helped lead the initial investigation into Prince Andrew’s seedy links to Jeffrey Epstein during three trips to America.

He had dozens of exclusive stories, while his travel writing took him to Jamaica, Brazil and Belarus.

He is the author of three books; Costa Killer, Dining Secrets of Andalucia and My Search for Madeleine.

Contact jon@theolivepress.es

3 Comments

  1. I must say that this short article is totally viased, since the term nation is really banned i the pre-sentence, and the spanish language is studied depending on the decision of the teacher, so is not mandatory to teach in catalan.
    A 10 million language as Catalan is, wich is persecuted everyday inside spanish state and not official in Euripa coz of spanish persecution, needs some kind of protection, tat now Madrid is not recognizing.
    Jaume, a teacher in public schools in Barcelona. Catalonia

  2. Our children were taught one hour a week of Castillian, (four hours of english) in a Catalan public school… they were also told to go-back-home and suffered racist attacks, even though they spoke in Catalan more fluently than their native classmates and even went on to win the JOCSFLORALS (a national poetry competition) and were BOO-ED and HISS-ED on stage by attending parents and grandparents. We moved across Spain as fast as we could afford to.

    Andalucia. What freedom. People with open minds.

    Barcelona is very pretty, great for tourists, but the nationalistic daily life is claustrophobic.

  3. Sophia, you have to take into account that you are explaining your individual bad experience you had in catalonia. But i’m from Galicia. And i’m very happy to live in Catalonia. So, you shouldn’t generalize so often.

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