Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
India

B.C. Teen Creating App, Summer Camp To Revive First Nations Language

The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2018 01:28 PM
    VANCOUVER — A 15-year-old high school student in British Columbia is turning to technology to help address a decades-old problem — how to revive an Indigenous language nearly lost to the residential school system. 
     
    Tessa Erickson of the Nak'azdli Whut'en First Nation is creating an app and organizing a summer camp to help get younger people in her central B.C. community speaking the Nak'azdli dialect of the Dakelh language.
     
    "To me, it's a bit of a symbol," she said. "The language is really important to me, personally, because it's a way to connect with my community and really bridge the gap between the generations."
     
    Members of her nation were fluent in the dialect about three generations ago, before they were sent to residential schools, Erickson said.
     
    The Grade 10 student said she's been told generations since then were afraid to teach the language to their children.
     
    "They didn't want the same experiences they went through to happen to their children if they passed on this language that was kind of looked down upon," Erickson said.
     
    Languages don't die naturally but are actively snuffed out, usually by colonial forces, said Mark Turin, chairman of the First Nations and endangered languages program at the University of British Columbia.
     
    Bringing them back is an explicitly activist and political act, and one that is key to reconciliation, he said.
     
    "Languages are about a lot more than words and grammar," Turin said. "A huge amount of local understanding, of culture, ecology, relationships with ancestors, with the past and with the land is all encoded in language."
     
    Right now there's an "exciting energy" across Canada among people doing the work, he added.
     
    There's some support from government, too.
     
    Ottawa has committed $89.9 million over three years to preserving, protecting and revitalizing Indigenous languages and cultures, and it was announced in June that the federal government would collaborate with Metis, Inuit and First Nations leaders on developing legislation to save and revive their languages.
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in 2016 that restoring Indigenous languages is the key to preventing suicides in First Nations communities.
     
    He said Indigenous communities that do a better job of teaching their own language and culture see "massive decreases in suicide rates," and those languages are an indicator of pride, identity, belonging and culture.
     
    People already working to refresh and preserve mother tongues are using a variety of methods, Turin said. But everyday usage is key to revitalization.
     
    "Tools and technology don't save languages — speakers do," he said. "No app, no online dictionary, no website is going to help bring a language back. That's about the commitment that people have."
     
    There are only a few people still alive who fluently speak the Nak'azdli dialect of the Dakelh language, Erickson said, and she's working with them as she develops her app and plans for summer camps.
     
    The app will be simple, she said, with lessons that teach greetings and give answers for simple questions.
     
    Erickson hopes it will be ready for spring, so kids can use it before heading off to sleep-over language summer camps.
     
    She said the camps will provide pre-teens and teens with an immersive language experience. 
     
    Erickson is also looking to improve her Dakelh. She already knows some words and can hold a simple conversation, but said she wants to work on communicating more complex thoughts.
     
    Canada is in a unique position to lead other countries in the process of breathing new life into Indigenous languages, Turin said, adding he can see a future where Indigenous languages are included in this country's official languages.
     
    "These languages should be encouraged and nurtured and given the resources to thrive in this multicultural and diverse society."
     
    Statistics Canada reported in 2011 that there were more than 60 Indigenous languages reported, grouped into 12 distinct language families.
     
    In November, Six Nations Polytechnic in southwestern Ontario launched its own app to help people learn the endangered Mohawk language.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Five Killed As Himachal Bus Falls Into Gorge

    Five Killed As Himachal Bus Falls Into Gorge
    Five persons were killed and nine others injured on Tuesday when a government bus parked on a roadside rolled down into a gorge in Himachal Pradesh's Kullu district, police said.

    Five Killed As Himachal Bus Falls Into Gorge

    India Opens First Partition Museum 70 Years After The Bloody And Painful Event

    India Opens First Partition Museum 70 Years After The Bloody And Painful Event
    A new museum on the Partition of the Indian subcontinent opens this week, as the two South Asian giants India and Pakistan mark seven decades as independent nations.

    India Opens First Partition Museum 70 Years After The Bloody And Painful Event

    Week After Varnika Incident, Another Woman Complains Of Being Stalked In Chandigarh

    Week After Varnika Incident, Another Woman Complains Of Being Stalked In Chandigarh
    Barely over a week after the incident of stalking of an IAS officer’s daughter here, another woman has complained of being chased by three men in a car.

    Week After Varnika Incident, Another Woman Complains Of Being Stalked In Chandigarh

    Chandigarh Girl, 12, Raped On Way To School For Independence Day Event

    Chandigarh Girl, 12, Raped On Way To School For Independence Day Event
    A 12-year-old girl student of a government school in Sector 23 was allegedly raped by a middle-aged man suspected to be a drug addict, at Children Traffic Park in Sector 23 on Tuesday morning.

    Chandigarh Girl, 12, Raped On Way To School For Independence Day Event

    Donald Trump Greets India On Independence Day

    US President Donald Trump on Monday called up Prime Minister Narendra Modi to greet the nation on its 71st Independence Day, Modi said in a tweet.

    Donald Trump Greets India On Independence Day

    Saragarhi Day On Sept 12 To Be Holiday, Announces Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh

    Saragarhi Day On Sept 12 To Be Holiday, Announces Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh
    Punjab will observe September 12 as Saragarhi Day to commemorate the historic battle of Saragarhi, held on this date in 1897, Chief Minister Capt Amarinder Singh announced on Monday.

    Saragarhi Day On Sept 12 To Be Holiday, Announces Punjab CM Capt Amarinder Singh