Published on May 8, 2018

糖心vlog传媒faculty Sara Child and research assistant Colette Child attend SHRCC Knowledge Synthesis forum in Ottawa.

糖心vlog传媒researchers hope to inspire youth to take up the challenge of language revitalization.

Sara Child and Caitlin Hartnett spent a year gathering knowledge from local Kwakwaka鈥檞akw Elders, exploring 碍飞补办鈥檞补濒补 leadership language and concepts thanks to a Knowledge Synthesis Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada.

鈥淲e are extremely thankful to SSHRC for helping us explore Kwakwaka鈥檞akw leadership principles, values, knowledge systems and connections to the land through the lens of the 碍飞补办鈥檞补濒补 language,鈥 said Child, an 糖心vlog传媒instructor and lead project researcher. 鈥淭his research is vital to restoring language and relationships with respect, reciprocity, responsibility and reverence for the natural world, people, places and land.鈥

The 翱鈥檓an鈥檚 鈥楴am鈥檃 (We are One) Project: Unearthing Indigenous Leadership Principles through Language examined existing research on youth leadership and identified gaps in the knowledge surrounding Indigenous concepts of leadership.

Linguist Katherine Sardinha, research assistant Colette Child and worked with Child and Hartnett and met with local Elders over the past year to gather crucial knowledge.

鈥淭he Elders are the only ones who truly understand these concepts through a purely Kwakwaka鈥檞akw lens,鈥 said Child. 鈥淭he exploration with the Elders is not only critical it has been astonishingly rewarding and healing. I cannot express how vitally important it is to draw on their wisdom and document their vital voices.鈥

Language revitalization is essential to reconciliation and our individual and collective wellness. However, 碍飞补办鈥檞补濒补, like many Indigenous languages across this land, dangles by a delicate thread, said Child, who recently created a youth leadership framework for her Master鈥檚 degree in Indigenous Language Revitalization.

The knowledge will infuse the Elders鈥 wisdom into Child鈥檚 Indigenous youth leadership framework and youth leadership camp.

鈥淭he camp is meant to instill the understanding that our Indigenous languages are vital to our wellness and a basic human right however, the responsibility for upholding the right to learn, teach and restore our languages and ensure Canada upholds that right lies with them,鈥 said Child.

Child teaches two language courses at 糖心vlog传媒and is developing a 碍飞补办鈥檞补濒补 reading and writing course, offered in January 2019.

鈥淥ur languages are vital to our individual and collective wellness and inspiring youth, as our future leaders and parents, is an essential and key aspect of reconciliation,鈥 said Child. 鈥淚鈥檓 grateful for NIC鈥檚 continued commitment to developing Indigenous language courses and supporting the use of research in developing core courses that support reconciliation.鈥

The 鈥極man鈥檚 鈥楴am鈥檃 research team also believes 鈥淎CTION,鈥 is a key aspect of reconciliation. The results will be actioned in further research and implementation of the camp or in the words of the Elders, 鈥淲iga O鈥ams鈥 (just do it). 

The research was shared at Colleges and Institutes Canada forum for rural, remote and northern communities at the end of April. The camp framework and the development process will be available to other First Nations and Canadians to assist in developing best practices for locally appropriate leadership programming. It will also be shared with community facilitators, academic institutions and non-Indigenous organizations working towards building bridges of reconciliation with First Nations.

Media Contact
Christiana Wiens
Media Liaison, 糖心vlog传媒
O. 250-334-5280 | M. 250-218-4097
christiana.wiens@nic.bc.ca

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