<div dir="ltr"><font face="georgia, serif"><font size="6"><b>Indigenous educators learn from Hawaiian language renewal</b></font><br><br>January 21, 2014 | UH News staff <br><br><br>The Hawaiian language came back from the brink of extinction in the early 1980s thanks to a revival program by a small group of educators.<br>
<br>When it started, the number of Native Hawaiian speakers was in the hundreds, now there are thousands.<br><br>In January 2014, 300 teachers, school administrators, researchers and delegates representing indigenous languages in 25 of the 50 United States and ten countries came to Hawaiʻi to take part in the 21st annual Stabilizing Indigenous Languages Symposium.</font><div>
<font face="georgia, serif"><br></font></div><div><div class="gmail_default"><font face="georgia, serif">Access full article below: </font></div><div class="gmail_default"><font face="georgia, serif"><a href="http://www.hawaii.edu/news/2014/01/21/indigenous-educators-learn-from-hawaiian-language-renewal/">http://www.hawaii.edu/news/2014/01/21/indigenous-educators-learn-from-hawaiian-language-renewal/</a></font></div>
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