Indianz.Com > News > Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation committed to language preservation

Cherokee Language Preservation Moving Forward
Monday, December 30, 2024
Cherokee Nation
Language connects us to our ancestors, our identity and our place in the world. For Cherokee Nation, preserving and revitalizing our unique language is a sacred duty. With every word of Cherokee spoken or written, we reclaim another piece of what it means to be Cherokee.
The task of revitalizing our language remains great, but through long advocacy to the federal government, we’ve achieved a major advance. At the recent White House Tribal Nations Summit, the Biden-Harris Administration unveiled a 10-year National Plan on Native Language Revitalization. The sweeping strategy — developed with input from tribal nations and the departments of the Interior, Education, and Health and Human Services — acknowledges and addresses the United States government’s historical role in the loss of Indigenous languages.
Cherokee Nation is ready to leverage the new momentum. Just last week, we signed an agreement that establishes a formal partnership between the tribe, Cherokee Film and federal entities, including the Department of the Interior, the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the National Fund for Excellence in American Indian Education.
Over the next decade, this collaboration will work to advance language revitalization efforts through film and media. Cherokee Film will provide expertise and access to its extensive nationwide network to assist tribes in preserving and promoting their languages.
This collaboration will not only preserve our language but also promote it on popular educational and entertainment platforms. Future generations will be able to hear and see Cherokee spoken and celebrated in everyday life.
The new federal, 10-year vision builds upon the findings of the Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative, which exposed the devastating impact of the federal government’s suppressing Native languages in youth and irrevocably damaging Native families and communities. Doing justice to this immense tragedy requires a major response, like the plan’s call for funding 100 new K-12 Native language immersion schools and training 10,000 Native language teachers.
For Cherokee Nation, these national efforts are long overdue, and they align with our own commitment to language preservation. Under our own Durbin Feeling Language Preservation Act we are making a historic effort to revitalize the Cherokee language, committing around $20 million per year. New federal dollars for language immersion and community revitalization will amount to about $1.5 billion annually nationwide over the next decade, and mirror our plans to grow our own schools, including a new middle school for Cherokee language learners.

Chuck Hoskin Jr.
is the 18th elected Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, the largest Indian
tribe in the United States. He is only the second elected Principal Chief of the
Cherokee Nation from Vinita, the first being Thomas Buffington, who served from
1899-1903. Prior to being elected Principal Chief, Hoskin served as the tribe’s
Secretary of State. He also formerly served as a member of the Council of the
Cherokee Nation, representing District 11 for six years.
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