'Cornwall is the most important part of me'

Lisa YoungCornwall
News imageDanni Diston Danni Diston takes a selfie as she is standing on a sandy beach. She has long blonde hair, blue eyes and a small silver nose ring. She is wearing a black hoodie with the hood up. Behind her are a couple of seaweed-covered rocks.Danni Diston
Danni Diston learnt to speak Cornish during the podcast series

BBC Radio 1 presenter Danni Diston, from Bude, Cornwall, has had an emotional return to her roots to learn the language of her home county.

She has hosted a Learn Cornish podcast in which she begins to speak Kernewek (Cornish) while exploring the stories and traditions that define Cornwall.

Diston, who is currently living in London, said she had "felt closer to Cornwall doing this podcast" and the county "will always be in me, it's the most important part of me".

She said: "There's this beautiful word called 'hireth' in Cornish and it means a sense of longing for home... sometimes you do have to leave the place that you love and identify with, but it doesn't mean it ever leaves you."

News imageThe podcast team posing for a group photo. There are six women, including Danni Diston and Sarah Buck and three men, including Edward Rowe and Mark Jenkin. The studio is brightly lit with pink and purple neon.
The Learn Cornish podcast was released on 1 May

Diston's family has lived in north Cornwall for hundreds of years but in her lifetime none have known much of the language.

She said: "We've been in Cornwall for the majority of our ancestry and I was quite shocked that, when you think of that, no-one in my family could speak it fluently, but we did have little words, like 'proper job', but the actual Cornish, Kernewek, none at all.

"I knew things I'd Googled, things like 'myttin da [good morning]' and maybe 'dydh da [good day]', but nothing nothing really over that, to be totally honest, so this has been such a beautiful experience."

News imageDanni is sitting in the podcast studio with the Grand Bard of Cornwall Jenefer Lowe. They are both smiling. Danni is wearing black biker boots, a black mini-skirt and brown cropped jacket. Jenefer is wearing a pale blue floor length gown under a blue velvet robe with gold brocade. She has a type of leather hat and a thick leather strap hanging around her neck. The studio is brightly coloured and lit with books, plants, vases and a bus stop sign on shelves.
Danni Diston said the final test of having a conversation in Cornish with Grand Bard Jenefer Lowe had been "absolutely terrifying"

The Learn Cornish podcast features Diston meeting Bafta-winning film director Mark Jenkin, actor-comedian Edward Rowe - who speaks fluent Kernewek - and Bethany Sheppard, a satellite dish engineer from Goonhilly Earth Station.

The podcast was commissioned to celebrate the Cornish language's recent upgrade to top level protection by the government - alongside Irish, Scottish Gaelic, and Welsh.

Diston said: "You don't have to be an expert and that's what this podcast is all about.

"The idea is to learn along with me and I think if you're interested in language or Cornish culture, it's just a really nice way to get involved and recognise that.

"I make some mistakes, but by the end of the podcast, we brought in the Grand Bard [Grand Bard of Cornwall Jenefer Lowe] and I had to talk a whole conversation in Kernewek with her, which was absolutely terrifying, but I felt like I did all right."

News imageEdward Rowe has his arms around the shoulders of Sarah Buck and Danni Diston. They are all smiling as they stand in the podcast studio. He is wearing a brown and white striped T-shirt and has a bald head and ginger beard. Sarah has long blonde hair and is wearing sunflower patterned dungarees over a black T-shirt. Danni also has long blonde hair and is wearing a black top with a gold necklace.
Danni Diston said she enjoyed throwing Cornish phrases into her BBC Radio One shows

She said Sarah Buck, from Cornwall Council's Cornish language team, had been her translator during her podcast.

"Sarah says a really lovely thing, she says languages are carriers of culture and I think just having a little bit of an exposure to that is really, really special, especially if you are Cornish."

The presenter said she and her co-presenter Sam MacGregor use Cornish in their BBC Radio 1 radio shows.

"Every time we speak and say something we thought was funny we'll shout 'splann [brilliant]' at each other," she said.

"It's throwing a little 'meur ras [thank you]' in, little 'dydh da [good day]', every now and then, and it really does make you feel closer to your Cornish heritage."

Diston said: "Being Cornish is the most precious thing in my heart.

"I grew up there, it's home and I think when you grow up somewhere like Cornwall, you have that Celtic connection and culture and it's just so unique to being from anywhere else.

"You're so connected to the land, it's so special."

"It might even be, you don't even have to be from Cornwall, it might be that it holds a lovely place in your heart, but this podcast is so open to anyone," she said.

"We had a laugh, we were learning but we were also just having so much fun and I think that really comes across."

The Learn Cornish podcast is available on BBC Sounds, with new episodes available every week from 1 May.

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