Chavacano spelled as Chabacano in Cavite City, a pidginized Spanish language formerly
spoken by majority of the people living in the city of Cavite, which
originated during the arrival of the first Spaniards in the late 16th
century. During this period, the people that lived near the military
arsenal in Cavite City put themselves in contact with the Spaniards and
began to incorporate in their own dialect many Spanish words, which then
gave birth to the Hispanic - Philippine pidgin dialect called
"Chabacano".
Today, only a fraction of the people in the city of Cavite speaks the
Chabacano dialect, mostly elders, so perhaps it will come to cease of
its existence or completely disappear in the near future.According to
the Philippine professor, Alfredo B. German who wrote a thesis on the
grammar in Chavacano dialect, the present conditions no longer favor the
disenrolment of the same one. There are many reasons for the probable
disappearance of the Chavacano dialect, but the main one is the massive
arrival of the Tagalog speaking people in the city of Cavite. The educated class has scorned the Chavacano dialect, refusing to speak it, and replace it with the Tagalog language.
One of the poets and Philippine writers, Jesus Balmori expressed
himself in Chavacano. He was a great admirer of the dialect and wrote
several verses in it. Another admirer of this dialect was Don Jaime de
Veyra, the illustrious writer and famous Philippine historian, who
feared more than all the probable extinction of the Chavacano when he
wrote the following prophetic lines, "I am afraid that the inevitable
absorption of the "Tagalog invasion" on one side and the invasion of the
English on the other hand, will wipe out or extinguish this inherited
Castilian language in existence with his last representatives in the
following generation."
Professor Gervacio Miranda who also wrote a book in Chavacano said in
his preface the following thing,"My only objective to write this book
is to possibly conserve in written form the Chavacano of Cavite for posterity," fearing the extinction of the dialect.
The survival of this hybrid language depends on their people, the people of the city of Cavite, who have inherited this dialect from their ancestors. Some now live in Olongapo City
and so far, there are only less than 500 people who could speak this
language in the city. According to many opinions, Chavacano was
scattered in different places of the Philippine archipelago, only of its
sort in the Far East or perhaps in the Hispanic world. Chavacano is
also spoken by a majority in Zamboanga City, where its future survival is much more secure.
Credit to: http://everything.explained.today/Cavite_City/
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