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Oklahoman, Monday November 8, 2004
Last words: American Indian languages are losing speakers fast
By Judy Gibbs Robinson The Oklahomať
NORMAN - An elderly woman with shaking hands dropped a candle
representing the Chiricahua Apache language during a recent ceremony to
celebrate Oklahoma's Indian languages. The candle fell to the floor and
went out. Although it quickly was relighted, the moment during the seventh
annual Celebration of Indian Language and Culture was symbolic of the
status of native languages in Oklahoma at the end of 2004.
Twenty-five native languages still are spoken here, but 10 are just one
generation from extinction. And that generation is growing old. "We are at
the greatest period of American Indian language extinction in history,"
said Dennis W. Zotigh, American Indian research historian at the Oklahoma
Historical Society. In September, two or three native speakers of Caddo
died, said Alice Anderton, a linguist who directs the Intertribal Wordpath
Society, sponsor of the Oct. 22 celebration. "Time is really running out
for some languages," she said. Although Oklahoma has 21,359 native
speakers, 10 tribes have 10 or fewer fluent speakers left, and 15 have
fewer than 100, according to Anderton's 2004 count, released in October.
"Every time we revise it, the numbers go down and not up," Anderton said.
The decline is not for want of effort, but the effort may be too little,
too late for most tribes, experts say.
It's been 14 years since Congress passed the Native American Languages
Act, which made it federal policy to preserve, protect and promote native
languages -- reversing the decades-old policy of trying to stamp them out.
In that time, many tribes have initiated language classes. For example,
Choctaw is offered in public high schools throughout the Choctaw Nation,
at community centers or via the Internet. Comanche is taught at the
Comanche Nation College in Lawton. University of Oklahoma students can
study Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek and Kiowa. At Oklahoma State University,
students can learn Muskogee. "That's all progress," Anderton said. "But if
you look at it in a real hard-nosed way, if you ask how many new speakers
of native languages there are, as far as I know, that number is zero."
The problem is that high school and college classes will not produce
fluent speakers, Zotigh said. The only hope for languages to survive is to
get young children speaking them, Zotigh and Anderton said. With that in
mind, some tribes, including the Choctaws, have language instruction in
their Head Start programs. But Anderton said the 15 minutes a day they can
devote to the subject is nearly worthless. "They can teach how to count or
to name animals. That's important culturally, but it doesn't save a
language, unfortunately," Anderton said.
In Oklahoma, only the Cherokee language, with 9,000 native speakers,
has much real chance of surviving because of its language immersion
preschool for 3-, 4- and 5-year-olds, Zotigh said. Thirty-four children
are enrolled in the program, which gives them eight hours of instruction a
day in Cherokee. Are they fluent? "Yes, ma'am," said Gloria Sly, director
of the Cherokee Nation's Cultural Resources Center. "They fuss back and
forth in Cherokee. They tell and tattle in Cherokee. They do all the
little things 3- and 4-year-olds do."
Cherokee language teachers developed an assessment tool to measure the
children's annual progress. It worked well for the first two years, Sly
said. "This past year, they blew the top off of it. We had to do a
revision" because the children already knew far more Cherokee than the
test was designed to measure, she said. Until now, the Cherokees had no
fluent speakers under age 45, Zotigh said. "This is a very good success
story," he said. Other tribes may have trouble following the Cherokee
Nation's model, Anderton said. "The logistics can be daunting. And in many
tribes, the elders are so old and feeble, they don't really belong in a
preschool because they can't get down on the floor with the children,"
Anderton said. Center celebrates heritage. For them, native languages may
become a cultural relic -- preserved and studied from writings and
recordings. Some of those artifacts will be displayed in the new Oklahoma
Historical Center, set to open in November 2005. Oklahoma's 39 tribes were
asked what should be included in the museum's Indian gallery, said Mary
Jane Ward, Indian historian at the historical society. They named three
topics -- origins, spirituality and language, she said. "That's because
language is so important to them," Ward said. Preserving native languages
is really about saving Indian cultures, Zotigh said. "Language is the
nucleus of Indian culture. We speak to our God in our language. Some
tribes even believe that without a name in your tribe, you won't be able
to enter the next spiritual world," Zotigh said. LeRoy Sealy, who grew up
speaking Choctaw and teaches it at OU, said people without their language
are like people with half a heart. "They can't feel that sense of fullness
because a part of them is missing," Sealy said.
http://www.newsok.com/print.php?article=1357774 11/8/2004 Check with
the tribes for classes.
Language Tribe Contact
Arapaho Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes (405) 262-0345
Caddo Caddo Tribe (405) 656-2344
Cherokee Cherokee Nation (918) 456-0671
Cheyenne Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes 262-0345
Chickasaw Chickasaw Nation (580) 436-2603
Chiricahua Apache Fort Sill Apache Tribe (580) 588-2298
Choctaw Choctaw Nation (580) 924-8280
Comanche Comanche Nation (580) 492-3751
Euchee Euchee Tribe of Indians (918) 224-3065
Iowa Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma (405) 547-2402
Kickapoo Kickapoo Tribe of Oklahoma 964-2075
Kiowa Kiowa Tribe (580) 654-2300
Sauk and Fox Sac & Fox Nation (918) 968-3526
Muscogee Muscogee (Creek) Nation (918) 756-8700
Seminole Seminole Nation (405) 257-6287
Osage Osage Nation (918) 287-1085
Otoe Otoe-Missouria Tribe (580) 723-4466
Ottawa Ottawa Tribe (918) 540-1536
Pawnee Pawnee Nation of Oklahoma (918) 762-3621
Plains Apache Apache Tribe (405) 247-9493
Ponca Ponca Nation (580) 762-8104
Potawatomi Citizen Potawatomi Nation (405) 275-3121
Quapaw Quapaw Tribe of Oklahoma (918) 542-1853
Seneca Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of Oklahoma (918) 542-6609
Shawnee Shawnee Tribe (918) 542-2441
Eastern Shawnee Eastern Shawnee Tribe (918) 666-2435
Absentee Shawnee Absentee Shawnee Tribe (405) 275-4030
Wichita Wichita & Affiliated Tribes (405) 247-2425
Source; Oklahoma Indian Affairs Commission

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