Friday, February 7, 2014

"Nolan gets message across to Latvian hockey team"

From The Journal Times.com:


"Three years ago, Ted Nolan needed a map to locate Latvia.

"Now he's speaking their language.

"Thanks to hockey, Nolan has become well-acquainted with the small, proud Baltic nation since taking over Latvia's national team, which he will be coaching at the Sochi Winter Games.

"'Yeah, I learned the language, and the people on the street taught me a couple of terms,' the Buffalo Sabres' interim coach said this week. 'I've learned a few words in Latvian to get by, how to shoot and work and compete.'

"These are among the phrases Nolan required to get across his message to players, a majority of whom compete in the Russian-based Kontinental Hockey League.

"And yet, Nolan's desire to learn the language went beyond bridging a communication gap.

"As a First Nations' Ojibwa growing up in Sault St. Marie, Ontario, Nolan is drawn to how a nation identifies itself through culture and language. In Latvia, that, in part, means speaking the native tongue after the country spent much of the past century under the control of the former Soviet Union.

"As a result, one of the first rules Nolan established was having only Latvian _ not Russian, Swedish or English _ spoken in the locker room.

"'When you're a group that's kind of been put down and under certain rule, sometimes it's tough to find your identity,' said Nolan, who leans on former Latvian NHLers Arturs Irbe and Sandis Ozolinsh to translate when necessary.

"'It's Latvia, so let's use your language. I think you should be proud to be a Latvian. You should be proud to be a Canadian. You should be proud to be from whatever nation you're from. And in Latvia, they're a proud people. And to be a part of that, I'm just thrilled.'"

Read more: http://journaltimes.com/news/olympics/nolan-gets-message-across-to-latvian-hockey-team/article_78e81cee-2fa0-500e-80d0-33d04ec7be20.html


My parents and sister emigrated from Latvia, their homeland, to the USA before I was born.

4 comments:

kkdither said...

I never really learned to appreciate and speak English properly, until I learned to speak another language. It is really a shame that learning another language isn't of high priority in our country.

legal stranger said...

Welcome to future Babylon.
Foreign language like music, develops the mind in multifaceted ways. learning music opens the mind to many dimensions. English is a very difficult language to learn, too many variables, exceptions and regional terms.

OrbsCorbs said...

Ashamedly, I can't speak or read Latvian. I can understand it if it's spoken slowly. My parents wanted to blend in, so they encouraged the use of English. After we started in school, my parents used my sister and me to tutor themselves in English. My father read the entire newspaper every day, everything, just to improve his English reading skills.

Some Latvian friends of the family sent their children to a Latvian school in Chicago to keep the language and customs alive.

When the Baltic States regained their freedom, it was an emotional time for me. The only reason I'm here is because the Soviets wouldn't leave Latvia after occupying it in WWII. My father considered FDR a war criminal for giving the Baltic States and more to Stalin.

SER said...

The French are real proud and will not speak English even if they know it.

5 of got lost on a Sunday on our way back to Frankfort and we ended up in Metz, France.

We stopped at a bar to ask directions. There were 5 guys sitting around a table in the bar, couldn’t speak English so I told the bartender to get them all a beer on me! All of a sudden 3 out of the 5 could speak English.

They gave us the directions to get back to Frankfort. They all told us the French are proud people and feel while you’re in France you should speak French.

Actually that’s the way I feel about the United States, if you’re going to live here, LEARN English!!!!!