EPISODE · Feb 14, 2022 · 21 MIN
The Cherokee: Saving a Dying Language in North Carolina
from Hometown History · host Shane Waters
Only 150 speakers remain. The Cherokee language, once spoken across a million square miles of North America, is disappearing, and COVID just killed 25% of the remaining middle dialect speakers. At the Museum of the Cherokee Indian in Cherokee, North Carolina, cultural liaison John John shares the devastating legacy of boarding schools, the "kill the Indian, save the man" policy that nearly erased Cherokee identity, and the urgent fight to preserve what's left.John John reveals forgotten Cherokee cities that rivaled medieval European metropolises, explains why sports mascots still wound indigenous communities, and demonstrates the beautiful complexity of a language that's straddling the line between seriously endangered and extinct. From forced cultural erasure to modern language preservation programs, this is the story of what was stolen, what's being lost, and what can still be saved if we act now.The Museum of the Cherokee Indian is planning expansions to tell these untold stories, the trade networks, the sophisticated urban centers, the technological achievements that American history books erased. But without speakers, the language that holds this knowledge dies. John John teaches us a few precious Cherokee words, plays a traditional flute, and issues a challenge: if you love history, learn Cherokee. Time is running out.Subscribe to Hometown History for forgotten American history stories every week. New episodes release Tuesdays.Show Notes: Why only 150 Cherokee middle dialect speakers remain alive todayThe devastating legacy of "kill the Indian, save the man" boarding school policiesForgotten Cherokee cities that rivaled medieval European settlements in size and sophisticationHow COVID-19 killed 25% of remaining Cherokee language speakersThe symbolism of John John's walking belt and the seven clansWhy indigenous communities still fight against sports team mascotsThe Kituwah Academy's struggle to teach Cherokee to new generationsCherokee language examples and the beautiful complexity of an endangered tongueHow to learn Cherokee online through "Your Grandmother's Cherokee"Tags: Cherokee language, endangered language, Native American history, Museum of the Cherokee Indian, Cherokee North Carolina, indigenous culture, boarding schools, language preservation, Cherokee history, cultural genocide, Kituwah Academy, seven clans Cherokee, indigenous language learning, North Carolina tribal history, American Indian boarding schoolsCategory: HistoryChapter Markers: 0:00 - Introduction: Museum Expansions and Lost Cherokee Cities 3:30 - The Scale of Cherokee Territory and Forgotten Urban Centers 6:45 - Moving Forward: Voting and Policy Impact 9:20 - The Crisis: Less Than 150 Language Speakers Remain 12:00 - Cowboys and Indians: Cultural Erasure Through Play 15:30 - The Boarding School Legacy: Generational Trauma 18:00 - Hope for Language Survival: Kituwah Academy 20:15 - Learning Cherokee: Words, Phrases, and Cultural Meaning 23:00 - The Seven Clans and Linguistic Diversity 24:30 - The Traditional Cherokee Flute and Conclusion Hometown History explores forgotten stories from small-town America. The overlooked events, hidden triumphs, and buried tragedies that shaped the country we live in. New episodes every Tuesday. Find every episode at mythsandmalice.com/hometown-historyAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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The Cherokee: Saving a Dying Language in North Carolina
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