Tongue Tied (fwd)
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Fri Nov 2 18:00:51 UTC 2007
Tongue Tied
Some 200 Native American languages are dying outand with them valuable
history
* By Robin T. Reid
* Smithsonian.com, October 31, 2007
Like most people, Johnny Hill Jr. gets frustrated when he can't remember the
correct word for something he sees or wants to express. But unlike most
people, he can't get help. He is one of the last people on the planet who
speak Chemehuevi, a Native American language that was once prevalent in the
Southwest.
"It hurts," the 53-year-old Arizonan says. "The language is gone."
In that regard, Hill is not alone. The plight of Chemehuevi (chay-mah-WA-vy)
is very similar to that of some 200 other Native American languages,
according to Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages in Salem,
Oregon. The organization's director, Gregory Anderson, estimated that
almost none of those languages remain viable. Navajo and Cherokee are among
the healthiest, so to speak; up to 20,000 people speak Cherokee, and he
estimates that around 75,000 use Navajo.
"Languages disappear when speakers abandon them," Anderson says. "When you
have a situation where two or more languages are used in a community, and
one is valued by the government or seen as the language of the educated,
people are sensitive to this. It's usually a subconscious rejection by
teenagers. Kids want to be cool; so if you have a way to remove something
negative about yourself, it makes sense."
Hear a Chemehuevi speaker say, "He is running." [audio inset]
Hear a Chemehuevi speaker say, "The boy is running." [audio inset]
Before Europeans settled in what is now the United States, Native Americans
spoke as many as 500 different languages. Virtually none of them had a
written component, which further imperiled their survival during
colonization.
"The idea was to get rid of the Indians and what made them Indian," Anderson
says. "They were put into boarding schools right up until the 1960s. They'd
beat up kids for speaking their languages, or wash their mouths out with
soap.
Hill recalls being teased for speaking another languageuntil his
persecutors got tired of him beating them up.
"I was raised by my grandmother, who never spoke English a day in her life,"
he says. "I eventually learned English.
I think mostly in English, but I
mix words up."
To keep Chemehuevi alive, Hill often talks to himself. "All the elders are
dying off," he says. "There may be about 30 true Chemehuevi left."
More than words are lost when languages die. They carry valuable information
about a population's history and living environment.
"These people have been living and interacting within their ecosystems for
millennia," Anderson says. "There is any number of things that people have
been talking about for years that we're unaware of that could help society.
For example, the Maya had an extremely sophisticated knowledge of astronomy,
and most of it is lost."
So how do you save a language? Hill tried the obvious routeteaching his
stepsonwithout success. "I taught him a word a day, and he used to write
them down," he says. "I don't know what happened to that."
Anderson and the others at the institute perform linguistic triage with
technology and psychology. First they determine why a community or group
has abandoned a language in the first place. Then they work to elevate its
status.
"Talking dictionaries help, and we're trying to build talking
encyclopedias," Anderson says. "People love to play with them, especially
young people. We show them that the stuff their grandparents know isn't
boring."
The institute goes where their assistance is wanted, from Siberia to Africa
to India. In doing so, they've identified 18 "hotspots"homes to languages
on their last gasps. Two of the top five are in the United States: the
Pacific Northwest and the Southwest. These are places with high
concentrations of Native American populations.
"It's a rescue mission," Anderson says. "But we're trying. We're trying."
Robin T. Reid, a freelance writer and editor in Baltimore, Maryland, last
wrote for Smithsonian.com about fossils in Kenya.
Find this article at:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/people-places/200711-tonguetied.html
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