Why Do Many Young People Feel Ashamed to Speak National Languages? In many African countries, especially in urban contexts, it is common to hear young people say they understand their national language but avoid speaking it. The shame of speaking national languages does not arise out of nowhere, it is socially, historically, and culturally constructed.
This article analyzes, clearly and realistically, why many young people feel ashamed to speak national languages and how this behavior impacts identity, culture, and the future of African languages.
Shame Does Not Come Naturally
No young person is born ashamed of their own language. Shame is learned. It emerges when, from an early age, a child realizes that:
• the national language is not valued in school;
• speaking their mother tongue is associated with backwardness or lack of education;
• social prestige is linked to colonial languages;
• making mistakes when speaking the language leads to laughter or humiliating corrections.
Over time, silence becomes a protective mechanism.
The Weight of Colonial Legacy
During the colonial period, many African languages were:
• banned in schools;
• excluded from administration;
• considered inferior or labeled as “dialects.”
Even after independence, these ideas did not completely disappear. They continue to influence:
• educational policies;
• family mentalities;
• social status criteria.
The result is a linguistic hierarchy where some languages are seen as “useful” and others as “embarrassing.”
School and Linguistic Exclusion
In many African education systems:
• the national language is not used as a language of instruction;
• mistakes in the national language are not addressed pedagogically;
• there are no modern or attractive learning materials.
This creates a negative association: “If it’s not the school language, it’s not the language of the future.” For young people, speaking the national language becomes a private, not public, act.
Fear of Mistakes and Judgment
Another central factor is the fear of judgment. Many young people:
• understand the language but cannot speak it fluently;
• grew up listening but not practicing;
• have urban or mixed accents.
When they try to speak, they may be harshly corrected or ridiculed. The consequence is simple: it feels safer not to speak than to risk making mistakes.
Urbanization and Generational Break
Migration to cities and distance from traditional communities cause:
• reduced daily exposure to the language;
• fewer role models for speaking;
• disrupted transmission between generations.
Without regular use, the language exists only in passive understanding.
Language, Status, and Identity
For many young people, language is linked to how they are perceived:
• speaking a national language may be associated with “lack of modernity”;
• foreign languages are seen as a symbol of success;
• young people feel they must choose between identity and social acceptance.
This choice is false, but it is deeply ingrained in collective imagination.
The Impact of This Shame
Linguistic shame has real consequences:
• reduced language use;
• loss of vocabulary;
• weakening of cultural identity;
• risk of language disappearance in the long term.
A language that is not spoken ceases to live.
How to Break the Cycle
Overcoming shame requires action on multiple levels:
• normalize mistakes as part of learning;
• create safe spaces for speaking;
• use technology to bring the language into daily life;
• produce modern content in national languages;
• show that speaking the language is an act of strength, not backwardness.
Kukubela’s Role in This Process
Kukubela works to combat linguistic shame by:
• offering judgment-free learning;
• using audio from real native speakers;
• teaching daily-use phrases;
• valuing cultural context;
• bringing the language closer to young people in formats they already use.
When young people learn at their own pace, confidence grows.
Speaking National Languages is an Act of Identity
Speaking a national language is not a return to the past. It is a way of affirming who you are, where you come from, and where you are going. Shame is not natural, it was constructed and can be deconstructed.
Download the Kukubela app and follow our social media channels to help preserve and value our languages.
