Esperanto
Esperantistoj — legu mian Esperantan paĝon.
I speak Esperanto and use it for international communication. I’ve got a blog in Esperanto at Esperanto-USA.
If you live in or are visiting the Champaign-Urbana area and you speak Esperanto, I’d be very pleased to hear from you. I’m the main contact point for the East-Central Illinois Esperanto Club. See the web page for details of our regular meetings. If you’re interested in Esperanto activities in and around Champaign-Urbana, I urge you to join the mailing Esperanto_Champaign mailing list:
Among my Esperanto activities, from mid-1996 through mid-1997 I was editor of EsperantoUSA, the newsletter of ELNA, the Esperanto-League for North America. I also wrote “Dolaroj kaj eŭroj grandbilete” which appeared in the January 1999 issue of Monato, the monthly Esperanto-language news magazine. With my brother, Steven BREWER, I’ve written a number of Esperanto-language haiku under the pen-name Istvan Bierfaristo. Check out the Zne Hakoj de Istvan Bierfaristo
You can learn more about Esperanto from these pages:
- Learnu.net
- This is fairly new, but seems to be a great place to learn Esperanto on-line.
- Esperanto.net
- General information about Esperanto.
- Esperanto League for North America
- ELNA’s pages have a lot of information about Esperanto and about the organization and its activities.
- Universala Esperanto-Asocio
- The international Esperanto association. (That’s the link to their English-language pages.)
- Esperanto Access
- An excellent introduction to Esperanto for non-Esperantists. It is also useful to Esperantists with a lot of pointers to web pages in and about Esperanto.
- Literaturo en Esperanto
- Links to hundreds of Esperanto texts, both original Esperanto works and works translated into Esperanto. As a resource for Esperantists, this page is outstanding. As a demonstration of just how much Esperanto literature there is, it is impressive.
- Project Gutenberg Esperanto texts
- Project Gutenberg has a number of Esperanto text books, some works by Zamenhof, and some other public-domain stuff in or on Esperanto.
Of course there’s a lot more, but the really good stuff is only available in Esperanto.