Roderick Bovingdon was born in Attard, Malta, on 28 September 1942 to Rebekka Debono and Henry Charles Bovingdon, an Englishman born in South Africa.[3] The family emigrated from Malta by boat and disembarked on the shores of Woolloomooloo, Sydney, Australia on 14 January 1959, when he was 16 years old.[4]
Career
The language of any group and/or nation is the sole cultural and intellectual property of the people who speak it: collectively.[5]
— Roderick Bovingdon, Malta Independent article, 2012
In 1968, Roderick Bovingdon founded the first School of Maltese Language outside of Malta.[6]
in 1974, he played a key role in the initiation of a popular Maltese song festival in Australia.[7]
National for the Maltese Language
He has written numerous opinion pieces and commentary criticizing the National Council for the Maltese Language's prescriptivist stance and dismissive approach to diasporic linguistic norms.[2][7]
Council for Maltese Living Abroad
In 2012, Tonio Borg, then-Deputy Prime Minister of Malta and Minister for Foreign Affairs of Malta, appointed Roderick Bovingdon to the Board of Experts as the Maltese community expert for Australia as part of the Council for Maltese Living Abroad, a council tasked with "keeping a registry of non-governmental organisations that were founded overseas by Maltese communities," among other initiatives and services for the Maltese diaspora.[8][9][10][11]
Musical career
In 1974, Rigu Bovingdon pioneered Maltese-language pop music outside Malta with the release of Bejn il-Ħbieb (Between friends), which was recorded in Sydney, Australia.[12]
In 1965, he married Iris Pace. They have two sons.[3]
Awards and honours
On 13 October 2012, Bovingdon was named Honorary member of the Maltese Poets Association (in Maltese: Għaqda Poeti Maltin)[15]
His 2015 book Laurent Ropà: L-Intellettwali Għawdxi-Franċiż was considered for the 2016 National Book Prize in the Historiographic Research category.[16]
^"Rigu Bovingdon". Malta Poetry u Poezija Plus (in Maltese). 7 November 2007. Archived from the original on 7 November 2007. Retrieved 9 September 2021.