1) The first is on the revival of the Coptic language. Are there any large scale efforts in Egypt or abroad to bring the language back into normal use? Surely it's possible, I believe that Israel did something similar with Hebrew?
2) What is the ACTUAL Coptic population within Egypt? There are all sorts of numbers flying around. Is this number shrinking, growing, staying the same? I actually visited a local Coptic parish last weeked and was told they have a pretty steady flow of Egyptians moving to the area from abroad
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2. According to estimates, about 8-15 percent of the Egyptian population is Christian, and about 95% of Christians are Coptic Orthodox. But yes, due to the political and economic climate, there has been a steady flow of Coptic immigrants to other parts of the world. It was at a high rate before during the Muslim Brotherhood, but the rate decreased now.
The difficulties with revival are:
01. The lack of motivation, there's no perceived esteem or dignity in learning Coptic as compared to English, there's no financial reward, not even to cover the expenses of time spent learning Coptic language.
02. The branding of Coptic as a Christian language: while most of the Coptic literature is religious in nature either Christian or Gnostic the non-religious texts are scanty. Coptic is perceived as important for scholars who are studying early Christianity. For Coptic to be revived it has to be branded as the language of Egyptians not Christians. There has to develop a secular tradition, and secular Coptic literature
03. The revival chaos: the various attempts of revival have not been in sync. with each other. Claudius Labib and Pisenti Rizkalla had their own tradition of neologisms, and somehow different perspective in Grammar. Some attempted writing Coptic in joined letters as in ancient English Script and Arabic scripts. Some attempted transliteration/transcription of Coptic as an alternative to Coptic letters to ease in learning the language. The pronunciation of Old Bohairic and the new words by Dr Emile Maher seem to be the most well crafted and logical ones, yet, he has been stigmatised, maginalised due to having different pronunciation, that was more authentic than the Iryan Moftah's reformed one.
04. Anti-Coptic movements: Many copts would oppose Coptic language saying that it's not necessary for salvation and that it's a waste of effort and time, in addition to perceived difficulty. Coptic should not be treated as a spiritual, religious, christian or ecclesiastical endevour it is a language not a theology