Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

The World's Indigenous Speakers Gather In Victoria To Revitalize Languages

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jun, 2019 05:43 PM

    VANCOUVER — Sto:lo Nation educator Ethel Gardner is confident that the fate of the Coast Salish language Halq'emeylem is looking up, despite its classification as critically endangered by UNESCO.

     

    "The language is alive. It's definitely reversing the trend towards extinction," she said.


    Gardner, who also goes by her First Nation's name Stelomethet, served as an elder-in-residence at Simon Fraser University, where she wrote her dissertation on the relationship between Halq'emeylem, pronouced halk-ah-may-lem, and Sto:lo communities of B.C.'s Fraser Valley.


    Decades of arduous work to preserve Halq'emeylem is paying off as more people begin to learn the language, she said.


    Gardner just recently completed the four levels of Halq'emeylem offered at the University of the Fraser Valley in Chilliwack.


    "I've been working hard all my life to understand what happened to the language and to help those who are dedicated to revitalizing it. I hadn't had time to learn myself," she said.


    There is only one fluent Halq'emeylem speaker, elder Siyamiyateliyot or Elizabeth Phillips, who is with Gardner this week in Victoria for Let the Languages Live, a major international conference focused on advancing the revitalization of global Indigenous languages.


    Organizers estimate about 1,000 delegates from 20 countries will be at the conference, including those with knowledge of almost all of the Indigenous languages in B.C.

    Gardner and Phillips are among a small group of Sto:lo language leaders who plan to share their experiences on organizing workshops that provided immersion training for Halq'emeylem teachers this past winter.


    "Most of the teachers are usually out in the field, in the schools or wherever they're teaching," said Gardner. "They're often the lone expert where they are, without having much opportunity to connect with others. They were elated to come together and share."


    The teachers themselves are still learning, striving for fluency after Canada's residential school system attempted to silence generations of Indigenous language speakers.


    The series of eight workshops gave 15 emerging and experienced Halq'emeylem teachers the opportunity to try different teaching techniques and resources, including podcasting, poetry, multimedia tools, and using gestures to help language learners avoid reverting to their first language.


    After the workshops, the language teachers paired up for what Gardner called "mini practicums," which brought community members together, from small children to elders, so the teachers could practice their new immersion techniques.


    "At one of the sessions the participants didn't want to stop. They wanted to continue on. My hope is that there will be some funding available for us to set up more community pilots so people don't have to go to a public school or a university institution to learn Halq'emeylem," said Gardner.


    "Not everybody is interested in getting credits or working towards a degree or becoming a teacher, they just want to learn Halq'emeylem," she added.


    The teacher training workshops were made possible by a nearly $95,000 grant from the First Peoples' Cultural Council, the B.C. Crown Corp. responsible for funding Indigenous language programming and one of the co-hosts of this week's conference.


    Friday marked Indigenous Peoples Day in Canada, and the federal government passed the first-ever national First Nations, Inuit and Metis languages Act. It affirms Ottawa's commitment to providing sustainable, long-term funding for Indigenous language revitalization, though details about the amounts and timelines for new funding have yet to be released.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crews Fight Fire With Fire To Keep Blaze From Northern Alberta Town

    Crews Fight Fire With Fire To Keep Blaze From Northern Alberta Town
    HIGH LEVEL, Alta. — A fire-threatened town in northern Alberta says a successful controlled burn has been carried out to help keep a raging nearby wildfire at bay.    

    Crews Fight Fire With Fire To Keep Blaze From Northern Alberta Town

    Judge Orders Satirical Website Journal De Mourreal To Change Name, Pay $23K

    Judge Orders Satirical Website Journal De Mourreal To Change Name, Pay $23K
    A judge has ruled a satirical publication dubbed the Journal de Mourreal will have to drop its name.

    Judge Orders Satirical Website Journal De Mourreal To Change Name, Pay $23K

    Scheer Promises Mandatory Sentence Of Five Years For Child Abuse

    OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer pledged Thursday to get tough on crime with mandatory minimum sentences of five years for anyone convicted of abusing children.    

    Scheer Promises Mandatory Sentence Of Five Years For Child Abuse

    Supreme Court Of Canada To Weigh Video-Lottery Terminals Class-Action Case

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will look at whether a potentially groundbreaking court case that takes aim at video-lottery terminals can proceed and, if so, on what grounds.    

    Supreme Court Of Canada To Weigh Video-Lottery Terminals Class-Action Case

    Clean Energy One Of Canada's Fastest-Growing Industries

    Clean Energy One Of Canada's Fastest-Growing Industries
    OTTAWA — Canada's clean-energy sector is growing faster than the economy as a whole and is rivalling some of the more well known industries for jobs, a new report shows.

    Clean Energy One Of Canada's Fastest-Growing Industries

    Smoke From Alberta Wildfire Drifts Northwest, Covering Much Of Yukon

    Smoke From Alberta Wildfire Drifts Northwest, Covering Much Of Yukon
    WHITEHORSE — Residents in many parts of Yukon are feeling the effects of smoke from a wildfire burning about 1,000 kilometres away in Alberta.

    Smoke From Alberta Wildfire Drifts Northwest, Covering Much Of Yukon