<font face="courier new,monospace"><font face="georgia,serif">Posted on Tue, Jun. 1, 2010<br><br>Trying to save vanishing languages<br>American Indians turn to recordings at American Philosophical Society.<br><br>By Stephan Salisbury<br>
Inquirer Culture Writer<br>USA<br><br>In the bright morning sun, Larry Aitken stood in the green Jefferson Garden next to the American Philosophical Society's library, offering up his Ojibwe words and his sacred pipe to infuse the conference with truth and purpose. Pungent smoke curled into the air.<br>
<br>Aitken - dressed in a vivid red shirt with a black bear on the back - presented an unusual image in the heart of the busy city. But for the 70 or so people gathered on South Fifth Street across from Independence Square, the Sacred Pipe Ceremony was both natural and essential.<br>
<br>Last month, representatives from 10 tribal communities across the United States, plus archivists and scholars, gathered for a two-day conference here to discuss how to make practical use of the philosophical society's vast collection of historic Native American materials, including about 113,000 photographic images and more than 1,000 hours of recorded American Indian languages.<br>
<br><br><br>Read more: <a href="http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/20100601_Trying_to_save_vanishing_languages.html#ixzz0pdximaoE">http://www.philly.com/inquirer/magazine/20100601_Trying_to_save_vanishing_languages.html#ixzz0pdximaoE</a> <br>
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