By Terry Murry on Wednesday, December 11th, 2024 in Columbia Basin News More Top Stories
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The departments of the Interior, Education, and Health and Human Services have issued a 10-year National Plan on Native Language Revitalization. It outlines a government-wide strategy to support revitalizing, protecting, preserving, and reclaiming Native languages. Billions of dollars are being reserved to make the plan a reality.
“Native languages were not just the way our ancestors communicated with each other long ago, but they were and still are essential to our cultures, our connection to the land, and our existence as Native people,” Board of Trustees Member-at-Large and Cultural Resources Committee Chairman Toby Patrick said. “Not too many years ago, the federal government tried to kill our languages with boarding schools and assimilation, so that’s why I’m deeply encouraged by the Biden-Harris Administration’s plan to set aside $16.7 billion to help tribes revitalize, protect, and preserve our Native languages. With these funds, I hope we can start replenishing Native speakers here at CTUIR and all around Indian Country.”
The plan was announced at the 2024 White House Tribal Nations Summit.
“Indigenous languages are central to our cultures, our life ways, and who we are as people,” Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said at the summit.
The plan calls for:
Supporting technical assistance providers to create schools and programs, including those with expertise in urban Indian settings and with the Native Hawaiian Community.