Native Arapaho Speakers
was actually published first by
http://www.bloglingua.com/native-arapaho-speakers/

On Wind River Reservation in Wyoming, the Northern Arapaho tribe is struggling to preserve its language.
As with many Native American tribes, Arapaho children were forced into boarding schools started in the late 1800’s in an effort to make them more “American.” Of course, that’s really pretty ironic if you think about it, considering that their ancestors colonized America thousands of years before the ancestors of the people who tried to “Americanize” them even knew this continent existed.
However, the goal of the boarding schools was to make Native Americans give up their culture and be more like the “civilized” English-speaking whites.
At the boarding schools, traditional Native American hairstyles were forbidden. So was the Arapaho language-students were punished harshly for speaking it. These practices persisted even until the 1940’s and ‘50s. As a result, there are no native Arapaho speakers under the age of 55. Knowledge of the Arapaho tongue has basically skipped a generation, although adults are learning it now as a second language. The New York Times reports that in an attempt to save the language, the Arapaho are opening a school for children where classes will be taught only in Arapaho. At first, the school will teach pre-Kindergarten to 1st grade, but will start taking in progressively older students over time if everything goes according to plan.
Hopefully, the immersion environment provided by the schools will create a new generation of Arapaho speakers. The American government’s attempt to extinguish Native American culture has done some serious damage and left many tribes with a legacy of poverty and social problems.
One interesting tidbit mentioned in this New York Times article was that fluency in native tribal languages has been tied to better academic achievement in Native American kids.
http://www.bloglingua.com/native-arapaho-speakers/
Filed under: enivornment, Indigenous Tagged: | Native Arapaho Speakers
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Hi
I don’t mind you re-using my content but can you give me a link back at the bottom of the article.
EG – original article Native Arapaho Speakers
Cheers dude
Bloglingua.com
I always give the link to the original link with the tip of the hat icon. Please read the first sticky in this blog, I made your an active link. I figure if folks want to follow up and re-read article the can,that they would just copy and paste the link to their browser. I assume most of my readers will realize that the first part of the URL up to the .com or ,org or . what ever ending, will take them to the index of the URL of the blog/story.
Kind,Regards,
gregor
Cheers dude… have a great weekend
and… you’ll love this site
http://www.thelogblog.co.uk
long story short – we are planting 50,000 trees over the next 5/6 years in the North East of England – this blog is all about it.
I have just moved it over to wordpress – so have 20 or so more articles to go on there next week (i.e. the archive), so its a bit thin on the ground at the moment (but you get the idea.)
great blog
keep up the work
Bloglingua/Logbloger