Immersion classes teach the youngest tribal members the Cherokee language |
Steps to Preserve Language. Six young children - four girls and two boys - sit on the floor looking up at their teacher seated in a chair. An older woman with streaks of gray in the long, straight hair pulled back from her face, she holds up flashcards with colors and words spelled out in distinctive lettering. Her students are learning Cherokee, the language of their ancestors, but a language many of their own parents didn't speak as children.
A difficult language for adults to learn
"I'm still learning. I'm a second language learner," says Renissa Walker, who is in charge of the language, history and cultural preservation program for the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.
Cherokee is the only Native American language with its own syllabary |
Walker says, like many languages, Cherokee is not always easily translated. "There are appropriate ways of Cherokee living that are embedded into the language," she says. She fears those ways of Cherokee living are being lost, because the Cherokee don't use the language in everyday living.
Like Walker, Michell Hicks, principal chief of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, is among those adults learning Cherokee. "My grandmother was fluent. My dad understands. He speaks some, but he only taught in bits and pieces, so that is how I learned." Chief Hick says he's still learning, and although he isn't fluent he does know quite a few phrases.
Chief Hicks has made language instruction a priority of his administration. The tribe estimates there are 300 fluent speakers among the population of 14,000. The majority are under five or over 50, like Renissa Walker's mother, Myrtle Driver.
The most important part of being Cherokee
Myrtle Driver says if the Cherokee language is lost, much of the history and the traditions of the Cherokee people will also be lost |
Driver was raised by her grandparents, who would not allow her to speak English in the home. Her daughter Renissa was raised by a white family. Driver says, at the time, it seemed the best choice for both her and her daughter, even though she wanted her to know about her Cherokee heritage.
But schools have improved on the reservation. A 1988 law gave American Indian tribes the authority to establish casinos on their lands. Some of the money that comes from the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indian's casino is funneled into education, including language classes.
Literature for future generations
Charles Frazier's account of the Cherokee removal in "Thirteen Moons" is the first work of English literature to be translated into Cherokee in 175 years |
Although Frazier is white, Driver says, "He wrote it as if he experienced it." One day, she says, the young children learning Cherokee through immersion classes will read that account of the Trail of Tears, "and they will read it in the Cherokee way, as if grandma were sitting there telling them what actually happened."
They will read it with their hearts as well as their minds.voanews.com
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