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akoyako :-)

YouTube - A Native American song - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 06 Jun 08 - Cached
  • NO VIDEO, just the songThis song is taken from the album Spiritual Songs, chants, flute music of the America [Doppel-CD, released 1997] If you want to know more about meanings of humming bird to native american people please visit this pagehttp://www.aaanativearts.com/article1...regards
akoyako :-)

YouTube - khomani san - 0 views

  • Short Documentary for Unesco on Endangered Languages
akoyako :-)

YouTube - The UN Works to Preserve Culture - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 23 May 08 - Cached
  • A clip abot the endangered language Naso in Panama. Property of The Discovery Channel.
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Ofelia Zepeda Renowned Poet & Linguistics Expert - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 23 May 08 - Cached
  • Ofelia Zepeda's work to inspire appreciation of the Tohono O'odham language is among her many efforts to preserve and revitalize the world's many endangered languages. She is considered one of the ...
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Hector Ruiz: The power to connect the world - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 09 May 08 - Cached
  • Hector Ruiz: The power to connect the world
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    Hector Ruiz: The power to connect the world
akoyako :-)

YouTube - UN Youth Caucus- Intervention on Language - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 06 Jun 08 - Cached
  • The Youth Caucus gives a passionate statement for the protection and survival of Indigenous languages. Category:  Nonprofits & Activism Tags:  Native  American  UN  Climate  Change  Permanent  Forum  on  indigenous  Issues  Indians  Non-profit  Foundation  languages  youth 
akoyako :-)

YouTube - "When Languages Die" author/linguist K. David Harrison - 0 views

  • Informative conversation with K. David Harrison, assistant professor of linguistics at Swarthmore College near Philadelphia and the author of the new book "When Languages Die: The Extinction of the World's Languages and the Erosion of Human Knowledge". He is the Director of Research at the Living Tongues Institute and was recently featured in the documentary called "The Linguists" which followed hands-on linguistic field work in countries around the world. In this fascinating interview, Harrison discusses the critical importance of the world's many threatened languages and the vital knowledge that each language uniquely packages and holds for all of us. Harrison also discusses the need for more trained linguistic personnel to go out into some of the remotest parts of the world to document these nearly extinct languages before they are lost to humanity forever
akoyako :-)

Internet breathes life into dying languages - 13 Jun 2007 - NZ Herald: Life & Style New... - 0 views

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    Internet breathes life into dying languages 11:46AM Wednesday June 13, 2007 By Amie Ferris-Rotman HOLYHEAD, Wales - Endangered languages like Welsh, Navajo and Breton have regained speakers and popularity in their communities and are now even "cool" for kids - thanks to the Internet. Welsh language expert David Crystal said the Internet could forestall the dismal fate of about half of the world's 6,500 languages, which are doomed to extinction by the end of the 21st century at a rate of about two language deaths a month. "The Internet offers endangered languages a chance to have a public voice in a way that would not have been possible before," said Crystal, who has written over 50 books on language including The Cambridge Encyclopedia of Language. Languages at risk of extinction are appearing on blogs, instant messaging, chat rooms, video site www.youtube.com and social networking site www.myspace.com, and their presence in the virtual world carries favor with youngsters who speak them. "It doesn't matter how much activism you engage in on behalf of a language if you don't attract the teenagers, the parents of the next generation of children," Crystal, who was raised speaking English and Welsh, told Reuters. Advertisement Advertisement "And what turns teenagers on more than the Internet these days? If you can get a language out there, the youngsters are much more likely to think it's cool." Online free Encyclopedia www.wikipedia.org, written and built by volunteers, has entries in dozens of endangered languages, from native American Cherokee to the Austronesian language Tetum, spoken by less than a million people in East Timor, to the Maori language of New Zealand. Tens of Welsh chat rooms exist for its 600,000 speakers - just over 20 percent of Wales - where young people look for the best pubs in town, or hunt for potential dates. Crystal said there are 50-60 languages in the world which have one last speaker, and around 2,000 have never been written. "
akoyako :-)

YouTube - The Navajo - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 24 May 08 - Cached
  • A short look at the Navajo Nation. Produced by First Talk, the first Indigenous Talk show.
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    The vision that the Navajo Nation has
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Navajo Language Academy 2007 - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 24 May 08 - Cached
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    (Less info) The Navajo Language Academy (NLA) is a non-profit educational organization comprised of linguists and language teachers who are devoted to the teaching, scientific study, and promotion of the Navajo language. Language is at the heart of the human experience and is one of our most valuable cultural resources. For indigenous peoples, language represents an immediate link to our ancestors and is a crucial element in maintaining a cultural identity after centuries of conquest and assimilation. Although Navajo is one of the only North American indigenous languages with enough remaining speakers to potentially survive, it is today an endangered language that could easily become another casualty without sufficient resources and support. While most Navajo elders still speak Navajo, recent reports indicate that fewer than 10% of Navajo four-year-olds do. Navajo is not being passed to our youngest generation. At the current rate of attrition, our language is expected to be extinct in a few more generations. If this happens, it would mean that no indigenous language in the United States or Canada will have survived the European conquest and avoided becoming a dead language. The Navajo Language Academy is working to preserve and promote the Navajo language. The NLA, comprised of Navajo linguists and language teachers with advanced training, vast experience and extreme dedication, offers intensive annual workshops on Navajo language pedagogy and linguistics. Growing enrollment in NLA workshops and the large number of articles and books authored or co-authored by NLA-affiliated Navajo linguists over the past decade give testament to the enthusiastic participation of the Navajo community. However, many interested Navajo educators -- including language, math, and science teachers -- are unable to attend the workshops because they cannot afford to. Tax-deductible contributions to the Navajo Language Academy will allow the NLA to provide its training and support of Nav
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Saving Native American Languages - 0 views

  • Using Voxtec's technology, a Cherokee man developed Phraselator LC - Language Companion, it is now used by over 60 tribes for Native language revitalization. Speak English into the unit and it translates to any Native languages. www.ndnlanguage.com
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    a 'talking dictionary' , an exciting tool to re-learn one's native language
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Navajo Language: From Past to Present - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 24 May 08 - Cached
  • This video was made for educational purposes.***UPDATED***The main purpose of this video was to show that language in the Navajo community has changed from the past to the present, and to realize that there were environmental factors that have influenced this change. There is an apparent difference between the number of people who speak the language and who can't. This is concerning because English only speakers have surpassed those who speak Navajo only, or are fluent in Navajo.Those interviewed are taking personal steps to learn how to speak the Navajo language, whether through books/dictionaries/classes.
akoyako :-)

YouTube - NWIN - Language Technologies - 0 views

  • A "Northwest Indian News" story about using "Technology to perpetuate Indigenous Language".
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Jan Chipchase: Our cell phones, ourselves - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 19 Jun 08 - Cached
  • http://www.ted.com Nokia researcher Jan Chipchase's investigation into the ways we interact with technology has led him from the villages of Uganda to the insides of our pockets. Along the way, he's made some unexpected discoveries: about the novel ways illiterate people interface with their cellphones, or the role the cellphone can sometimes play in commerce, or the deep emotional bonds we all seem to share with our phones. And watch for his surefire trick to keep you from misplacing your keys.
  • http://www.ted.com Nokia researcher Jan Chipchase's investigation into the ways we interact with technology has led him from the villages of Uganda to the insides of our pockets. Along the way, he's made some unexpected discoveries: about the novel ways illiterate people interface with their cellphones, or the role the cellphone can sometimes play in commerce, or the deep emotional bonds we all seem to share with our phones. And watch for his surefire trick to keep you from misplacing your keys.
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    reminds of the Chilean guy who uses phone to call indigenous speakers of language he is learning.
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Wade Davis: The worldwide web of belief and ritual - 0 views

shared by akoyako :-) on 15 Jun 08 - Cached
  • June 13, 2008 (Less info) http://www.ted.com Anthropologist Wade Davis muses on the worldwide web of belief and ritual that makes us human. He shares breathtaking photos and stories of the Elder Brothers, a group of Sierra Nevada indians whose spiritual practice holds the world in balance.
akoyako :-)

YouTube - Great spirit - 0 views

  • Mytical native american indian pictures compilation...
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