im so happy to find a vedio i can learn mohawk language off please keep sharing, my grandmother hid her and our heritage because of the things she experienced in life. we were very close even thou she passed when i was young... im very white she was very brown but my siblings and i were so proud when we learned where we were from, some are not native but i think its so very important to remember where we come from, everyones history not just mine. im proud to be mixed but i feel more native then anything, i think the reason we lost our language is because of so many things and i was shocked and APPALED to learn less then 3000 people can speak it. I am very hopeful that we dont forget. please keep sharing and miiwhech.. that was my first word..
I want to thank you so much. I'm a 55 year old man who's Grandmother was one of the few positive things in my childhood growing up in Cornwall, and this was her language. I used to feel her walking with me long after she died. She taught me some words, but never lived long enough to teach me the language. I hadn't realized how much of her I had lost until I heard the words being spoken. They filled my heart with her presence once again. The teaching is gentle, kind and patient. And it feels full of the love of the language and the old ways. I have set out to learn as much as my damaged 55 year old mind will hold. But you have already filled my heart. Thank you. Niawen’kó:wa
Thank you, so much, for your fabulous lessons! One of my other favorite Mohawk language channels no longer exists, and I was trying to figure out where to turn, and I saw this in my feed. Very helpful
I love this! Since there is no word in Kanien'keha':ka for adopted, "I am the chosen boy" among the Shawnee and Cherokee. I am attempting to teach myself the languages of both. When I have learned them, I'll move on to Miami. All 3 Nations are in my area of IN. I only wish I had someone to work with me on this goal. Makes me wonder, my last name being Martin, if I have relatives in the Six Nations... But, then, there's a Marks and a Clemens in my tree also, and those are Miami sur-names too. I may never know...
im so happy to find a vedio i can learn mohawk language off please keep sharing, my grandmother hid her and our heritage because of the things she experienced in life. we were very close even thou she passed when i was young... im very white she was very brown but my siblings and i were so proud when we learned where we were from, some are not native but i think its so very important to remember where we come from, everyones history not just mine. im proud to be mixed but i feel more native then anything, i think the reason we lost our language is because of so many things and i was shocked and APPALED to learn less then 3000 people can speak it. I am very hopeful that we dont forget. please keep sharing and miiwhech.. that was my first word..
I want to thank you so much.
I'm a 55 year old man who's Grandmother was one of the few positive things in my childhood growing up in Cornwall, and this was her language. I used to feel her walking with me long after she died. She taught me some words, but never lived long enough to teach me the language. I hadn't realized how much of her I had lost until I heard the words being spoken. They filled my heart with her presence once again.
The teaching is gentle, kind and patient. And it feels full of the love of the language and the old ways.
I have set out to learn as much as my damaged 55 year old mind will hold.
But you have already filled my heart.
Thank you.
Niawen’kó:wa
Learning because of Assassins Creed 3, really cool language
Thanks for this! There are so few Mohawk language classes online, and you have such a great teaching style
Thank you, so much, for your fabulous lessons! One of my other favorite Mohawk language channels no longer exists, and I was trying to figure out where to turn, and I saw this in my feed. Very helpful
I'm glad you are keeping the language alive!
miig wiicht for sharing...and preserving our languages...☼
I love this! Since there is no word in Kanien'keha':ka for adopted, "I am the chosen boy" among the Shawnee and Cherokee. I am attempting to teach myself the languages of both. When I have learned them, I'll move on to Miami. All 3 Nations are in my area of IN. I only wish I had someone to work with me on this goal. Makes me wonder, my last name being Martin, if I have relatives in the Six Nations... But, then, there's a Marks and a Clemens in my tree also, and those are Miami sur-names too. I may never know...
who"s your folks ,, grandma ,, papa etc... ???
Would love to see a chart created with all the sounds similar to the German der/die/das tables
I wonder if Mohawk would do well being written in a syllabary!
sir, would you be so kind to upload more videos like this?
Would you be willing to put these vids in a playlist in a viable order to learn from? That'd be sweet.
where he teach because that so cool
I never get to hear Ganiengeha spoken...Niaweh
I like that wo(e) and fo(e) dont exist.
I always wanna to know if native American Indian have different languages they speak or can Lakota, mohawk understand each other languages.