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Native American Languages Siletz Dee-Ni, Ashininaabemowin Facing 'Extinction'

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First Posted: 02/18/2012 9:49 am Updated: 02/18/2012 9:49 am

By: Clara Moskowitz, LiveScience Senior Writer
Published: 02/17/2012 06:56 PM EST on LiveScience

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Many of the world's minority languages, some spoken by only a handful of speakers, are on the brink of extinction, and community activists and scientists are teaming to try to keep them alive.

One example is the Native American language Siletz Dee-ni, which was once spoken widely by native people in Oregon, but which now may be spoken fluently by only one man: Alfred "Bud" Lane.

"We're a small tribe on the central Oregon coast," Lane said via telephone here at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. "Like most small groups of people, our pool of speakers has been reduced over a period of time, until the 1980s when very few speakers were left. Linguists labeled it 'moribund.'" [Q&A: Dead Languages Reveal a Lost World]

But Lane and his community decided to fight back.

Talking dictionaries

"Our people and council decided that was not going to happen," Lane said. "We devised a plan to go forward and begin teaching our dialect on the reservation."

Now schoolchildren in theSiletz Valley School learn Siletz Dee-ni two days a week. Lane said they're picking it up faster than he ever hoped.

Still, the coast isn't clear. Whether Siletz Dee-ni can become spoken well enough, and by a large enough group of people to continue being used in daily life remains to be seen.

"Language extinction is not an inevitability, although it is a very strong trend that is going on right now," said K. David Harrison, a linguist at Swarthmore College who worked with Lane to assemble an online talking dictionary of more than 14,000 words in the Siletz Dee-ni language.

The dictionary, sponsored by National Geographic's Enduring Voices project and the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages, is just one of many linguists are compiling to record the world's dwindling collection of endangered languages before it's too late.

What we stand to lose

As native peoples assimilate more and more into the dominant cultures around them, and as younger generations grow up speaking dominant languages like English in school and with their peers, fewer and fewer people are becoming fluent in native tongues. In the past, government repression of native languages and ethnic shame has also seriously hindered the survival of these languages, researchers on a panel here said.

But if the world loses these languages, it loses more than just another way of saying the same thing, experts argue.

There is a "vast knowledge base, knowledge of plants, animals, how to live sustainably, that is contained uniquely in those languages," Harrison said. "We are all enriched when small language communities choose to share their knowledge."

Studying the languages also teaches linguists new language patterns, and helps preserve other elements of native culture such as foods and traditions.

Teetering on the brink

But what does it take for a threatened language to stay alive?

Margaret Noori, a professor at the University of Michigan and a speaker of Ashininaabemowin, the native language of the Ojibwe people indigenous to the Great Lakes area, not only speaks the native language, she also sings and writes poetry in Ashininaabemowin. [Recording: Ashininaabemowin Song]

"For it to be considered alive, we need to be creating in it," Noori told LiveScience. "Otherwise it's like studying Latin."

Noori teaches Ashininaabemowin language classes at the University of Michigan, and runs a website, www.ojibwe.net, to collect recordings of Ashininaabemowin speakers. She also harnesses social media such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube to spread the word about the language.

Still, despite the hard efforts of many people, the continued survival of Ashininaabemowin is not assured.

"If I'm honest, statistically, I'd say it doesn't look very good," Noori said. She estimates there are fewer than 15,000 speakers of the language left, and possibly as few as 5,000. Eighty percent of Anishinaabemowin speakers are older than 65.

Despite the odds, though, she and other native language advocates don't plan to give up.

"We have a whole new generation of people coming up that sing our songs, learn our traditions," Lane said. "We were teetering on the brink, and I think we've finally turned the corner and reversed that now."

You can follow LiveScience senior writer Clara Moskowitz on Twitter @ClaraMoskowitz. For more science news, follow LiveScience on twitter @livescience.

Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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By: Clara Moskowitz, LiveScience Senior Writer Published: 02/17/2012 06:56 PM EST on LiveScience VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Many of the world's minority languages, some spoken by only a han...
By: Clara Moskowitz, LiveScience Senior Writer Published: 02/17/2012 06:56 PM EST on LiveScience VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Many of the world's minority languages, some spoken by only a han...
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09:51 PM on 02/23/2012
It does not have to become extinct. Enduring Voices website has on-line talking dictionary, and I am using it. This unique Athabaskan language of the Pacific Northwest does not have to become a historical memory. So be a "shu-naa-ghit-li~' " or good person, and go in and use it.
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TYRANNASAURUS
UGH!....people taste like crap!
12:29 PM on 02/22/2012
'Extinction' Looms For Native American Languages...

Extinction looms for everything on this planet due mainly to global warming cause by an excess of human population because they feel a need to OVER breed.
02:19 AM on 02/21/2012
I remember a story years ago about a language that was only spoken by two elderly people, one a man, one a woman.
Someone told the man about the woman, hoping to get them together.
"What was her family name?" he asked.
Once he heard the answer, he said, "Oh, her people and our people never got along."
And that was that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RobParker
11:48 PM on 02/22/2012
i think they were the last two people on earth with the recessive common sense gene. lmao. seriously though, the story sounds familiar to me
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RedRat
Ignorance is fixable, stupidty is forever
10:59 PM on 02/20/2012
As in all things, if languages do not adapt to modern times they fall by the wayside, they go extinct. One day that will probably happen to English and all the other languages we use commonly today. Adapt or die, that is the way of life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ambrecel
06:49 PM on 02/20/2012
The Alaska Native elders talked about this in the early 1990's and I listened, the elders were saying how the youth were not learning traditions or languages, I hope the languages can be recorded and saved.
11:18 AM on 02/20/2012
Awwww maaaan I always wanted to speak Sumerian, but I only got the alphabet.
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DXM
An extreme moderate
08:55 AM on 02/20/2012
As someone with an interest in languages and how they evolve, I certainly applaud efforts to preserve these and other dying languages across the globe (the problem is hardly unique to our continent). However, in the grand scheme of things they are just postponing the inevitable. ALL languages evolve, grow and eventually die. If they didn't, we'd all be speaking Brythonic instead English or whatever pre-Indo-European language that was spoken in England before the Iron Age. Thousands if not tens of thousands of languages have already disappeared over the millenia and someday even "Modern English" will disappear.
watoos013
Minister of Truth
08:40 AM on 02/20/2012
Who do these people think they are? The real American language is English, wait, oh.
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ken607
Nothing natural about gas,nothing clean about coal
08:33 AM on 02/20/2012
first their lives then their culture now its their language. when will they ever stop. the american dominance is faulty. we act like the BORG., assimilate or die. when a beautifull culture like the native americans had is one i wish to have back. but now all we have are GREED AND CORRUPTION. what happened to a simple existence? if the choice id chose the native way. they are a magnificant people and we all could learn something from their past. truely a sad day when our culture is supposed to be a melting pot, but turns out to be a lie. all they want is more people like them. a slave to their culture. consumerism!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
warsaw
Painting the house blue in 2014.
09:05 AM on 02/20/2012
I never understood the metaphor ' melting pot' in reference to immigration. To me that means everyone eventually becomes the same, their identities become less defined. I would have used the word, 'stew' as that connotes individuality and complements and enhances others.

I live in North Kitsap County in Washington and the tribes here make a concerted effort to keep their language alive. We see it on signs, sides of their school buses, in advertising, etc. It's definitely a challenge.
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RedRat
Ignorance is fixable, stupidty is forever
11:05 PM on 02/20/2012
You are living in a romantic dream that was common in the 18th and 19th centuries. This romantic notion of the Noble Redman gave us the reservation system. The romantics of the 19th century wanted to keep the American Indian captive by living in teepees and hunting the buffalo so that they could go out west and see the "primitive" in his native habitat. Whether we like it or not, cultures are assimilated, for better or worse, usually to the overpowering culture. Not saying that Native Americans did not have a fine culture, but sadly our more warlike and expansionist American culture reduced them to isolated reservations around the country. But who knows, they may make it back by opening even more casinos and becoming big business corporations. Hey, they might even take over our culture.
06:07 AM on 02/20/2012
THEE,THOU,GOEST,PILGRIMS,EVEN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE HAS EVOLVED AND MOVED FORWARD.SAD BUT TRUE,OTHERWISE WE WOULD ALL STILL BE GRUNTING AND GETTING NO WHERE.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Luke McIntosh
04:50 AM on 02/20/2012
I think the problem is more about where or why you'd use the language. It'll go extinct simply because there's no reason to speak it. I think spoken dictionaries would be a great idea. Have people fluent in a dying language to literally make a speaking dictionary that we then keep on record.
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RedRat
Ignorance is fixable, stupidty is forever
11:07 PM on 02/20/2012
But eventually even here how long will these recordings stay around if the language is not useful for making it in contemporary society. As in all things, that which is obsolete is doomed to the trash heap of time. Unless those languages offer some utility they just will not be used, and like the buggy whip, go the way of the Dodo bird.
11:16 AM on 02/21/2012
The Ojibwa and other Nations have every reason to speak it. It helps preserve their culture. I'm not sure about other Nations, but the Ojibwa are not going to stand idly by while their language dies.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
beenzrgud
Can't say what I'd like to here.
04:09 AM on 02/20/2012
Language evolves over time in response to the requirements placed upon it. As the world becomes more globalized lots of languages will disappear in the future, and even the ones that don't will likely radically change. I can understand people wishing to see parts of their culture being kept alive, and they are free to try and do so.
Languages are very interesting and usually give good indications as to the nature of cultures, for example the things that they considered were important and how they viewed their world. We have the technology to record and document endangered languages in order to study them in the future. I think this is where we should focus our efforts instead of trying to keep alive languages which in the end are likely to become extinct.
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03:20 AM on 02/20/2012
God punished his people by creating distinct languages. Therefore, diverse languages are scriptural. If you are a Fundamentalist Christian, and you want to adhere to God's Word, you would give your all to preserve God's plan. If you don't, you are going against God, committing a grave sin.
firstamendment3
It's all so ironic.
08:21 AM on 02/20/2012
God also forced his followers to committ incest. That's a little too creepy for me.
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thetxsndn
Man Plans. God laughs.
09:49 AM on 02/20/2012
Look in the old Hebrew text for the meaning of the words Adam and Eve. Yes, I said words. They weren't names.
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12:57 PM on 02/20/2012
And your conclusion is what, that because (in your words) "God...forced...incest" that his Fundamentalist followers should not support the saving of Native languages?
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jockmama
08:30 AM on 02/20/2012
Then why aren't YOU posting in Garden-of-Eden grunts? What "language" did Adam & Eve speak, and who taught it to them? The "Bible" is such an historical joke that it's really, really hard not to giggle when some redneck tries to quote from it.
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12:53 PM on 02/20/2012
You made an incoherent reply.
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Boognish represent
Hey there, fancypants.
03:15 AM on 02/20/2012
They just need to shorten the name and make it ring a little nicer.
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C Sparkman
Not your grandmother's unicorn
03:02 AM on 02/20/2012
If I lived in the 1650's, or the 1870s, or the 1920s, I'd want to live in a place where I blended in. Must have sucked.
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Ruyur
I can't believe you like money too. We should h...
11:30 AM on 02/20/2012
You could quickly learn to understand and be understood 400 years ago, if you like that time-travel idea.

800 years ago, maybe.

1200 years ago, you are learning a foreign language, noting occasional curiosities that make you suspect it's related to English.

http://assistantvillageidiot.blogspot.com/2009/03/worlds-oldest-words.html