<b>Aboriginal language returns from the dead</b><br><br>AM By Nicola Gage<br>Updated Mon Oct 1, 2012 2:05pm AEST<div>AUS<br><br>An extinct Aboriginal language has been brought back from the dead, thanks to a handful of dedicated people in Adelaide.<br>
<br>Twenty years ago, not one person spoke the native Kaurna language of the Adelaide Plains, with the last known fluent speaker dying in the late 1900s.<br><br>But Jack Buckskin, 25, teaches people his native language at the Living Kaurna Cultural Centre where a group is gaining TAFE qualifications in the once-extinct language.<br>
<br>Mr Buckskin says interest in the program has been growing and the language is again thriving.<br><br>Access full article below: <br><a href="http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-10-01/aboriginal-language-returns-from-the-dead/4289056">http://www.abc.net.au/news/2012-10-01/aboriginal-language-returns-from-the-dead/4289056</a></div>