A clarion call to action, incorporating powerful stories of struggles
and successes, that points the way for all who seek to preserve
indigenous languages.
Across North America, dedicated language warriors are powering an
upswell, a resurgence, a revitalization of indigenous languages and
cultures. Through deliberate suppression and cultural destruction, the
five hundred languages spoken on the continent before contact have
dwindled to about 150. Their ongoing survival depends on immediate,
energetic interventions.
Anton Treuer has been at the forefront of the battle to revitalize
Ojibwe for many years. In this impassioned argument, he discusses the
interrelationship between language and culture, the problems of language
loss, strategies and tactics for resisting, and the inspiring stories of
successful language warriors. He recounts his own sometimes hilarious
struggle to learn Ojibwe as an adult, and he depicts the astonishing
success of the language program at Lac Courte Oreilles, where a hundred
children now speak Ojibwe as their first language.
This is a manifesto, a rumination, and a rallying cry for the
preservation of priceless languages and cultures.