United Nations representatives in Morocco use Amazigh to write their own documents
Among the valuable initiatives that are credited to their owners is what was recently undertaken by Edward Christou, Permanent Representative of the United Nations Development Program in Morocco, by writing “Tifinagh” in the Amazigh language and in its original letters, on his visiting card. This was considered a bold step, and an actual contribution to implementing the requirements of Chapter Five of the Constitution, which stipulates activating the official character of the Amazigh.
In this context, several national and international institutions, bodies, and private professionals were involved in the process of issuing the regulatory law to activate the official nature of the Amazigh language. Such procedures are part of a large workshop, the pillars of which are the translation of the names of institutions into Amazigh on their front facades. And also translating information about individuals and personalities into Amazigh and writing in it, as is the case with les cartes visite cards.
It is noted that the “Tifinagh” letters, with which the Amazigh language is written, have been able to register a large presence on various identification signs for public institutions and administrations, but they are still noticeably absent in the official documents of many national and international institutions represented in Morocco, which mostly rely on the Arabic and French languages. .
Source: websites