What is missing in language revitalization?

When two of my grandmothers were dying, they reverted to communicating in their traditional language. There was no one at their sides who could understand their dying words. This is one of the reasons I choose to learn my language and examine at a more holistic way of language revitalization. While...

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Main Authors: Bell, Lucy, Weir, Candace
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10125/26106
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spelling ftolac:oai:scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu:10125/26106 2023-05-15T16:32:32+02:00 What is missing in language revitalization? Bell, Lucy Weir, Candace Bell, Lucy Weir, Candace 2013-03-02 http://hdl.handle.net/10125/26106 eng English eng http://hdl.handle.net/10125/26106 Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported CC-BY-NC-SA 2013 ftolac 2020-05-27T15:22:26Z When two of my grandmothers were dying, they reverted to communicating in their traditional language. There was no one at their sides who could understand their dying words. This is one of the reasons I choose to learn my language and examine at a more holistic way of language revitalization. While community learners attend language classes, use master-apprentice techniques and study language resources, we are running out of time to save our critically endangered language isolate. The handful of fluent teachers are over 80 years of age and the Haida communities on Haida Gwaii, BC in Canada and in southeast Alaska are in the race of our lifetime to ensure our language survives. We need to slow down, offer a prayer and call upon our ancient spirituality and beliefs. Haida ancestors once used ceremonies, prayers and medicines to empower their speech, songs, memories and place in this world. They called upon the spirits of Story-woman, Lady Luck and others for help. There is a great need amongst the Haida and other indigenous peoples to have a deeper understanding of indigenous epistemology, tradition and spirituality to ensure our languages survive. Through archival research, elder interviews and personal practice, I will share Haida epistemology as well as the ancient traditions that can hep to revitalize our dying language. 26106.mp3 Other/Unknown Material haida Alaska OLAC: Open Language Archives Community Canada
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language English
description When two of my grandmothers were dying, they reverted to communicating in their traditional language. There was no one at their sides who could understand their dying words. This is one of the reasons I choose to learn my language and examine at a more holistic way of language revitalization. While community learners attend language classes, use master-apprentice techniques and study language resources, we are running out of time to save our critically endangered language isolate. The handful of fluent teachers are over 80 years of age and the Haida communities on Haida Gwaii, BC in Canada and in southeast Alaska are in the race of our lifetime to ensure our language survives. We need to slow down, offer a prayer and call upon our ancient spirituality and beliefs. Haida ancestors once used ceremonies, prayers and medicines to empower their speech, songs, memories and place in this world. They called upon the spirits of Story-woman, Lady Luck and others for help. There is a great need amongst the Haida and other indigenous peoples to have a deeper understanding of indigenous epistemology, tradition and spirituality to ensure our languages survive. Through archival research, elder interviews and personal practice, I will share Haida epistemology as well as the ancient traditions that can hep to revitalize our dying language. 26106.mp3
author2 Bell, Lucy
Weir, Candace
author Bell, Lucy
Weir, Candace
spellingShingle Bell, Lucy
Weir, Candace
What is missing in language revitalization?
author_facet Bell, Lucy
Weir, Candace
author_sort Bell, Lucy
title What is missing in language revitalization?
title_short What is missing in language revitalization?
title_full What is missing in language revitalization?
title_fullStr What is missing in language revitalization?
title_full_unstemmed What is missing in language revitalization?
title_sort what is missing in language revitalization?
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10125/26106
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
genre haida
Alaska
genre_facet haida
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10125/26106
op_rights Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-SA
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