@@sesjfisoejlongcompton3357 Cherokee sounds so tremedously beautiful, its soft and beautiful sounds touch my heart in sincerity! Saami from the north of Norway Rolf Olsen
I have never looked into my heritage and I know that I have cherokee on both sides of my mom's family and same as on my dad's . The way the music is and the speech is almost understandable to me but the sound of it is not what I know to be proper lol going to be involved in the heritage and definitely research it
The Cherokee spoken here is of the North Carolina (tsa-la-gi u-we-ti) dialect. I am of the Oklahoma Cherokee but am still able to understand most of what has been said in Cherokee dialogue in these videos!!
I am from Claremore oklahoma and am trying to learn my native tongue I have no more elders in my family that can teach me how to read my Cherokee to english dictionary it's hard to understand how to pronounce the syllables can you please help so our language doesn't die I know I am only a quarter Cherokee but one drop of blood and pride is all it takes spread our seed
Thank you for preserving the Cherokee language. I'm sixty and this is the first time I've heard it spoken. I have family in Oklahoma that I've never met. I'm proud to be Cherokee.
i glad it is not lost my family look more white so i was told we hid the fact we were cherokee and understand for the time when they were attack for no reason but wish we would have keep it up in secret so it would not be lost to me and any kids i have to where we have to find a different way to learn it
Hi, I'm trying to learn my Cherokee language! I am Cherokee woman and Irish, but I am grateful to be Cherokee! My great grandmother was full blood Cherokee Indian! I remember her but vaguely, because I was only around 5 years old when I talked to her! I can't even remember my grandmothers name! My mom and dad both Cherokee Indian and Irish! I don't know how much Cherokee I have but I'm going to try my best to learn my Cherokee language! Thank you for being there my Cherokee brother! Lori Hightower, my maiden name! Lori Sanders is my married name! I always keep my maiden name because I am very proud of it! Thanks for reading my massage, Lori Hightower Sanders. 'Ye Ho Waa' Am I saying the Creators name right?
Hi, I'm trying to learn my Cherokee language! I am Cherokee woman and Irish, but I am grateful to be Cherokee! My great grandmother was full blood Cherokee Indian! I remember her but vaguely, because I was only around 5 years old when I talked to her! I can't even remember my grandmothers name! My mom and dad both Cherokee Indian and Irish! I don't know how much Cherokee I have but I'm going to try my best to learn my Cherokee language! Thank you for being there my Cherokee brother! Lori Hightower, my maiden name! Lori Sanders is my married name! I always keep my maiden name because I am very proud of it! Thanks for reading my message, Lori Hightower Sanders. 'Ye Ho Waa' Am I saying the Creators name right?
Lori Hightower Sanders Sanders !! I'm searching RUclips as I just found out that my husband is Cherokee, Irish and German! I love learning and think it would be amazing to bring some of the Cherokee tongue and culture into my kids lives!
This was the very best and most positive Documentary I have seen to date of the Cherokee Native American Indian people and I would wish this type of development upon all the many different Native American Indian Tribes in America if that was at all possible. Where there is a will there is a way and this is admirable. The most positive thing being the family units schooling together with the very small children learning from and with the elders. I also admired the School set up and the dedicated staff and using the best of both worlds with technology, Tablets and computers and what struck me was the Language is what the Cherokee people are about and it is who they are. This was brilliant and I was so pleased and so happy to see that 12,000 years of heritage is not being lost and there is a hope to preserve it and push forward with the children to maintain it and develop and grow so they have bi-lingual children who's first love is their own mother tongue. I wish the parents who do not know it could learn it too by returning to school that would ensure saving the language from extinction . This was amazing, well done and I wish you all great joy and happiness and success
we all been lied to here is the truth ruclips.net/video/LkL1NCMXYEQ/видео.html ruclips.net/video/A6G9j-A5wUs/видео.html ruclips.net/video/Y5WM6o_P-34/видео.html
Gina Jumper The last speaker of the wichita language died last year. She said when she was young many spoke the language, but when she got old, she was the only one left that spoke it.
@@stormy-le6pb What a sad story. I'm a Saami from the north of Norway, so I do indeed understand and feel the pain of that last speaker. Greetings from me, who would like to learn Cherokee if I knew how
They have immersion schools in Oklahoma where English isnt allowed and the headstart teaches Cherokee. I wanted my kids in the immersion class after headstart but didnt get them in :-( they are forgetting what they learned
I would love to go learn the language. It's amazing that this is possible, today. It gives me joy to know the language is being revitalized and preserved.
ᎣᏍᏓ ᎾᏕᎦ ᏣᎳᎩ ᎦᏬᏂᎯᏍᏗ ᎠᏂᏬᏂᎭ ᏥᎪᏩᏘ ᎦᏬᏂᎯᏍᏗ ᎠᎴ ᎠᏂᏴᏫᏯ ᎤᏠᏱ osda nadega tsalagi gawonihisdi aniwoniha tsigowati gawonihisdi ale aniyvwiya utloyi It is great to see Cherokee language being spoken. Language is the same as our native people.
I know this is from years ago, but I wish you or someone you know would volunteer to add Cherokee to Duolingo. Almost all of their lessons are done by volunteers. They've been adding Navajo slowly, but I'd prefer Cherokee since that's in my ancestry. It is such a beautiful language, to me
@@og-greenmachine8623 it's funny you say something so rude but under the assumption neither I nor most anyone else will understand you. ᎪᎵᎦ ᎤᏁᎦ ᎦᏁᎦ ᏥᎾᎳ ᎠᏎᏃ ᏲᏁᎦ ᎤᏓᏅᏖᏙᏗ ᎯᎾᎳᏐᎢ ᎩᎦᎨᏯ ᎰᎯᏳᎲᏍᎦ ᎢᏳᏍᏗ
All my life, my native tounge had been denied me. Now too old to learn. Still, it's sound haunts my spirit. Like a dying man on a desert craves water. Yet, water upon touching his lips are too parched to receive. Still he guzzles it down. Knowing the fleeting moments won't last. Like the broken child's heart. The Spirit cries for more. It's been a long time coming.
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this is really sad but true the government doesn't help they don't offer any language classes for cherokee and they also don't really teach much about anything native american in schools today its like they wanna get rid of our whole race but they forget that we were here first .
Katie Cook they are not teaching history of any people correctly. I have Cherokee on my Mama’s side of our family and what I know is what I learned from her just not the language
Siyo! I am of ᏣᎳᎩ (Tsalagi or Cherokee for readers who don't know) heritage and am trying to learn the language, but it is hard as I do not know anyone who speaks it and I live in Fl. So glad to have all of the language videos, books, and apps though.
Language is the reservoir of a culture. It's touching to see a precious culture staying alive or starting to strive again. Keep up the good work, You guys can do it! Blessings from Asia!
This is an excellent video on the Cherokee language. I’m so relieved to hear about the immersion schools; they are a sure way to increase native speakers. I’m not American Indian, but value their histories, languages and cultures. I’m sure there are tribes that are entirely gone, and that’s a tragedy. Bless all who work to the preserve and restore their richness. Can you record your elders? It wouldn’t be enough, but it might help.
It would be so sad if we lost the Cherokee language. I'm 77 yrs. Old ! And I have lost it. I'm to learn it. Never too old to learn. I'm only 1/8 th Cherokee and I feel inside more Cherokee than any other.
I am so glad that my Cherokee grandfather taught me to speak our language beginning when I was 4 years old. Of course, at the time, I wasn't very happy about it. But at 65, I'm so happy that my grandchildren are learning to speak Cherokee from me. Blessings to all of you for preserving our language. It's my opinion that a Tribal language is paramount to maintaining its culture. Be well ...
Our Aunt was the only one to apply for and receive tribal recognition within the Eastern Band of Cherokee, I did all the research and my wife helped to get the documentation prepared. I sent it to all my mothers family members, all Cherokee on the mothers side, Grandfather full-blooded Cherokee but not on the dowels rolls!!! Grandmothers people were though. All Born and raised in Eastern United States. It is sad that many of us never learned about our Native culture and the Language and will soon be lost, you may only have one drop left, but when you have no culture and no language one drop makes only the smallest contribution!!! Yet it still give us hope!!! Dennison and Nicholson were my connection to the Tribes of Cherokee. I remember one set of Names were George and Martha Dennison, wink wink!!!
My grandmother took the trail you seen on the map that goes to Iuka, Mississippi in the northeastern part of the state and escaped the trail of tears. My family is still here in northeast Mississippi. She was the last person in my family to speak the language.
Exceptional documentary. In the UK, the Welsh have fought hard to keep their language. I believe the best solution is to start teaching a child both English and Cherokee from the youngest age possible. Ages 1 - 4 are the ideal window. We lose half of our lifetime amount of brain cells by the time we turn 5. This early overabundance of brain cells is designed to give their mind the ability to absorb as much knowledge as possible. My niece speaks both English and Italian fluently because my mother-in-law has only spoken Italian to her from the day she was born. The rest of her world is English. So, just one person taught her fluent Italian by the time she was 5. This shows how easily a child can learn multiple languages at this vital age I mention. Good Cherokee people, teach them young! Save your heritage.
When the children go home, they need to teach their parents' the Cherokee language. Just a few words at a time. Possibily as a homework assignment. That way the children will feel extra smart. And it could end up helping their parents learn too. Plus, this will help reinforce and ingrain the language into their souls.
Some things to do at home for the kids to retain what they learn is to put labels around the house in the language like table ,bed plates cups these little things help them retain what they have learnt .As a Maori you see a lot of this in maori homes for both the parents to learn and children to retain.Hope this helps
What an informative video!! Very inspiring and fruitful example of language revitalization efforts!!! Hope this will inspire others to help preserve their own dying languages and dialects..... when a language dies, knowledge dies with it... Thank you for producing and sharing this documentary.
I don't want to loose your language!! It is very important to me and I am Half Italian and Irish× English ,my grandfather told me as a child that on his fathers side of the family that we have Indian, native American mixed into us & I was just 7or8 years of age and I jumped for joy ,no grandfather spoke no words ,he was a yound toddler when his father went home to our Creator ,I cryed right soon as I got out of grandfather's site,then my Grammy came into my bedding area to see why I was crying, I beg add n to tell her why ...can understand and speak Italian ,not fluently ,I definitely understand what my Nona is saying lol she got her point across ,belive me ,she spoke broken English they called it..I hope that they keep speaking your language full time ...Thank you very much for sharing your video and knowledge with me ,I do appreciate it !
Then please teach us! Don't send us away! My 2nd great grandmother was Southwestern SC reservation, a Wolfe and the government shrank the territory so she married a scots-irish. Now I'm beggining to find a way to learn tsalagi and when I contacted the eastern band council the receptionist laughed at me and told me I was lied to! No.. my ancestor is cherokee! I have almost black hair and dark eyes and I tan like nobody's business! Someone up there please give me the time of day and understand your old territory went right to Columbia SC.. well past my location range! I was once in your reservation land and I'm DYING to know "my" original language!! But laughing at those who are no longer in your reservation territory is not the way to go if you want to preserve the language! I learn fast, and want to know my ancestors' language way of life! Give us "mixed breeds" a chance here!
theclanplus1 i know your struggle. many of us mix bloods aren't accepted by indigenous communities. its a shame bc you have young children growing up on rez lands not interested in learning more about the language as they are graphed into this colonize world. then u have us mix blood who want to learn and preserve the history and culture and language but we are turned away and called lyers and wannabe. to save this language and culture minds do need to be more open to mix blooded ppls. if you can PROVE your ancestral tides through DNA then i would like to the tribal communities become more open to at least teaching language and cultural aspects of the tribe.... im not askinh to move to the rez... im happy here where i am living because i know its historically original Aniyunwiya land. i would just like to learn the language so i can speak to creator in the language.
theclanplus1 the Dobbs are on the Baker Rolls, but because my direct ancestor was in KY as early as 1902 when my grandma's mom was born in a mountainside mining camp, and there's no birth certificate or SSN, I'm in the same boat. The traditions and language will die without us descendants that want to learn and carry on. Less than 2% of all the people in the whole US can legally prove tribal membership to colonists, an unfortunately, tribes have abandoned traditional oral history
You're not really "mixed breed" you're at most 12 % Native American, thats not being mixed LOL. You are like 80 % White European, but if you do want to honor your ancestors, help the community, do more things for native people, give money, help elders etc.
"I am a person of this place." I understand that as a feeling. I feel that I belong to the land where I live. I eat the wild berries from the forest . I eat the fish from the creek. I build my home from the trees.
I’m definitely not Cherokee but I’ve spoke broken Cherokee since I was 12 since my grandma wanted me to speak it and I was just humoring her. Now I’m 23 and I speak it to my children and learn more everyday. It’s kept them safe from strangers before or saved them from embarrassment. Now it’s more of a time capsule and a story for my grandma as shes gotten much older since then. Now my husband, adopted from Korea and into a totally white family, wants me to teach him lately. It makes families closer, I believe.
I just learned about my Cherokee lineage two years ago by my 92 year old Grandmother at the time. My Grandmother has been completely assimilated into the white way. She can not teach me anything. I believe that I am the only one she confided to about our bloodline. When I asked my Aunt she had no idea what I was talking about. I am so saddened by this.
Probably not all the way Cherokee, most native people can't pass for white. It's only the very mixed one that are able to, so that's why you guys are not aware of that ancestry. Still you are white with a small amount of cherokee so please do things for other natives. Being Native is more than just a "bloodline" it's about protecting native culture and its people.
yea that is one of the problems with Cherokee is the language generation gap that my family has as well. my grandfather spoke but it wasn't passed down to my mom and I am trying to pick it back up
It was my grandfather's first language, and when he spoke you could tell english was his second. However it was illegal to be caught speaking native languages then and if he taught my father, my father hid it (he hid much of his father's teaching as he said it went against his christianity and refused to teach me). My dad and his brother's were the first to be born away from Oklahoma since my ancestors were moved there. I know of my heritage, but was intentionally disconnected from it because white traditions were more acceptable to my Dad (I think because he and my uncle's were picked on because of their heritage).
My grandmother's grandfather was Cherokee I wish I knew more of my great grandfather, when I hear the language or music I feel my heart & soul is saddened, maybe because my heart & soul remembers something that my conscience doesn't. Or I have a deep desire to know my ancestry & feel lost.
My Father was raised in Cowee, I in Nikwasi (Franklin)... my great grandmother was full Cherokee and it made me so happy to hear these places named in this documentary, we will keep this place alive. Cherokee language is still taught at Cherokee (NC) schools... so there is hope. I know it sucks to have to claim a relative for this, but it can and should matter to us to keep it alive.
I wish there was an online community for those of us who would love to learn our native tongue. I would love to learn Cherokee, I would freely speak my native language. It's bs they encourage kids to learn other languages but ban ours, the true language of this land we share. I think they want to smear us out because they are truly scared of us, if they tear us down we will never rise, ensuring their plan that we won't rise again. WE WILL NEVER BE SNUFFED OUT...we will always remain!
I had a vision where this was happening. I lived it for a few months then I was knocked out and ended up in a low place. The graves were being given proper burial. The industry age had ended. I hope I can make it back...
I am waiting for the day when America will have Indian president either from Lakota Onondaga Cherokee navazzo Cheyenne or whosoever. But it must be an Indian that's it. I cry for Lakota. Perhaps you all know the situation of Dakota county.
This film is so beautifully made and so important - I have cried many times while watching, and I feel for/with the people of these ancient and living valleys
@wiilliamssporing1500 Aren't the Wyandot doing anything about teaching the language to the young? Your tribe is going to be like the Wichita Indians, whose last speaker died last year. She said she heard it spoken all the time when she was young but when she got old, she was the only one could speak it and she was half white and half Wichita.
@@tippy550storm yes, they are reviving the language. The Wyandot are all out west in Oklahoma and Kansas. I live in Kentucky, so I’m pretty much on my own. I am slowly picking some things up.
It hurts my heart to know your people have suffered so much by the Caucasians as my people have. I also know many other peoples have suffered as your people. But I am also happy to learn that you’re teaching your children to speak the language. I am Hawaiian mixed with some Chinese. My father was a Native Hawaiian whose first language was hawaiian and lived when it was still outlawed to speak our native tongue. So he and our elders would speak it in the privacy of homes and private meetings. He would not speak to us his children in Hawaiian at all. Only words here and there. When I finally learned why my father did not teach or raise us speaking tHawaiian, it hurt my heart. We now have Hawaiian Immersion charter schools too, which I’m grateful for. Preservation of your culture and language is so important because to lose it completely is to say they win. Their purpose was to assimilate your and my people into their culture and language to get rid of anything that was part of our lives. It’s history repeating itself over and over.
I hope that one day, when this program has not failed but PERSEVERED, to take my own children to the summer school to learn this beautiful language and keep it going. I would recommend a program for parents as well... at least basics to keep it living and refreshing until the continuing years for our children. Beautiful, informative video. Thank you!
persevered is good but revitalized is better and you are right about getting parents involved it is hard for the children to continue speaking when the people around you don't speak
Cherokee is an Iroquian language, which is quite different from the indo European languages. So of course there vocab will be different. Seems like Cherokee has cases as well, quite a few. Just like the Italic languages.
My Grand father came back from the reservation in Oklahoma back to Alabama and eventually to the Cherokees beloved North Georgia. The language was lost in my family. Many not knowing their Cherokee Ancestry . There are other Cherokee in my Ancestory on both sides of my family. My Grandmother knew many ways of her culture and heritage yet very little of her language. I learned so much following her around the east Tennessee ridges and valleys, looking for medicinal plants, roots, berry's and materials for making a variety of items. preservation and making textiles, beadwork and basket making were fading in her years but she passed on as much as she knew. Her knowledge including, gardening, farming and the love for the earth was her blessing to myself and my sister. My Cherokee heritage is is instilled, cherished and loved in my heart. I pray the culture, syllabary and language are forever preserved. It is more than a culture, it is a respectful, moral way of daily living.
Blessing for all your hard work, for what you do for these Children. Studies show all children who learn a two languages gain a peak advantage in learning.
Karen Partin actually it's very characteristic of Christianity. The entire history of Christianity has been that way. Christianity is a patriarchal religion and has always attacked and destroyed matrilineal cultures
TheHikarianz u kno also, it seems like u more than me insulting your people.. you are saying your people's own ways (whatever they were -remains unclear) were abhorrent, the only thing that redeems your people is the other ways forced upon them. So essentially your people were inherently abhorrent? Anyways obviously I don't know anything about the situation. But that's how it sounds to me. I'd be interested in your follow up
If you think I insult my own people I don't wanna waste my precious time to argue with you. I try my best to live christian values and I don't want to spend much time to argue on internet. Christian haters are everywhere on internet as if cursing christian is their own permanent job although statistically they might be fewer than christians. However I respect your choice to live in deep hatred toward christians. You may hate me but I don't hate you.
They used to teach that Hebrew was a dead language when I was in school. After the Six Day War they found out it wasn't. Don't let your language, traditions and beliefs die.
Beautiful so proud to see teaching the Language that for a very long time was forbidden this is amazing and made the great spirit continue to guild and mother earth continue to keep our people of all our Surviving Tribes thank you for this amazing opportunity🦅🪶🦅
Watching this in 2021. We have witnessed a full year of this SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic... Hearing fluent Cherokee (or Tsalagi Gawonihisdi) for the first time brought me to tears. 2021 marks the 200th anniversary of the founding of the Cherokee written syllabary. I dread to ask these questions now... How many Cherokee people have they lost? How many of their elders died because of this pandemic? I hope the Cherokee Nations will recover and heal. I hope all Indigenous peoples and their cultures will flourish again.
50 second, you said lost everything. I feel same heart. The scene. Same. We say soc-dae, 솟대. The first sound of Society and daddy, soc + da.. im korean, your ancient relative,
Osiyo, Dohitsu ? Hello, how are you ? My Cherokee great great grandma was owned by a black northern lights family & severely beaten like a wild beast ! But she survived & was rescued by a sweet southern Carolina man who married her & became free to speak & think & live her life ! Oddly, even those who claimed we were a lesser then slaves not even considered smart enough of able enough to do anything right, we proved them all wrong & did so many incredibly amazing life changing things ! Thank you for this video ! Sincerely Pawl-Wadw / Paul~.
@5:17 Hav3 you heard a more absurd concept than to Americanize Cherokee? That's like saying the the We have to Greekify the Spartans. The Cherokee are more American than apple pie.
Preserve your native language, I think it is mystical and resonates the connection to nature and balance. This world doesn't need a unified language because heritage and tradition becomes washed.
@@davidnorton3139 ya y your y y. areas will 6 ya. areas 7 h 6h y y.if your your included with this your. if a if 6 if y y.7 ya your. puppy. we you.y y y ya 😳 ya y 6x7 few y yo u r you. you. u know y.
Keep up the great work,keep teaching the children the Cherokee language and way of life.my grandmother was fcherokee.i don't know if she spoke the language or not I wish I did.i'am almost 70 year's old.
I truly truly wish i could speak my cherokee langue..cherokee have suffer more then any other tribes in this world ..altho i LOVE being half cherokee no one will take that away from me
I was raised and still live in Duplin/Wayne county NC and was never exposed to any Native culture in school and even community...I don't even know how to find out what tribes actually lived in either county but I really would love to be able to learn! I admire the elders of the Cherokee for caring for the next generation and passing down such a treasure such as the language....Much love and respect to all of you teaching and learning!
Love our Cherokee, NC and it's people. So glad to hear they are teaching their young the language and culture. Cherokee was one of the most wonderful places to get to vacation when we were growing up. They shared their culture and earned a living doing it. Who wouldn't enjoy the outdoor drama "Unto These Hills " and the historical Indian village? If the younger generation isn't taught how is all that going to survive? I haven't been there in more than ten years. I truly hope all that is still there. The last time I was there it appeared the casinos had robbed the village of its uniqueness. Hopefully by now they have found a way to profit from their casinos and rebuild and continue to share their culture in the village. Love the documentary.
Japanese is not tonal. However, Cherokee is, and you are right it sounds a bit like an east asian language but also as a native mexican language such as mixtec wich is also a tonal language.
@@quetzalcoatl3242 yeah the tsalagi were essentially Mayans thousands of years ago but then the Aztec went nuts and started slaughtering whole tribes.. so they migrated all the way up to the north east coast and eventually assimilated into Iroquois and settled as their southern border against the creek..... so yeah the language should definitely be similar to native "mexican" languages
Yeah I can't stand the super white folks that claim Cherokee heritage. Don't get me wrong, there are white Cherokee (I am one because I am Cherokee and German) but it's always "My great grandmother was a Cherokee, and her name was Sneaking Fox" or some shit.
@@dalendriver8265 I hate it 🤣 I'm a pale skin native, but I'm still native. I went to school with kids that have none of the features but claim to be native. My grandmother is full blood and her husband is Melungeon (Cherokee, Dutch, and black). My mom is Dutch white and cannot tan. I'm white, but 10 minutes in the sun and I look like oven baked turkey 😂
I think that school is an AMAZING thing you are doing. That really is the only was to preserve the Cherokee language and culture. I hope you can continue doing the good things you are doing with the children of your community. I've visited Cherokee nc. My ex husband is Cherokee and I felt so much at home there. It's such a spiritual place. One of my best friends was also Cherokee and she actually spoke the language a bit. Idk how much she did. We didn't have enough time on earth together. She passed away at 40 years old. She was teaching me all the ways of the culture and I continue to practice them and continue to learn.
to preserve the language anyone who wants to learn it (native or not) should be allowed to learn it. Desperate times call for desperate measures. Just like science. Those who see the importance of it should be allowed to learn it FREE because it's something Christians and the religious are trying to take away
I don't want to see it taken away and I'm a child of God. I have Cherokee blood in me and I'm a Christian. I hate how the Cherokee and other tribes were treated.
This was an interesting video. It’s sad to even imagine that one’s language, culture, or family would no longer exist in one’s own lifetime. What you do if you could prevent that from happening? Are you Awake? 🗣🤔
please do not give up the Cherokee language keep it going. thank you very much
it sounds like its a sing song language i bet the japanese would have an easier time learning
@@sesjfisoejlongcompton3357
Cherokee sounds so tremedously beautiful, its soft and beautiful sounds touch my heart in sincerity!
Saami from the north of Norway
Rolf Olsen
@@rolfolsen3236 I love the way the older generation talks it does have a beautiful flow to it. I also like to hear the songs
I have never looked into my heritage and I know that I have cherokee on both sides of my mom's family and same as on my dad's . The way the music is and the speech is almost understandable to me but the sound of it is not what I know to be proper lol going to be involved in the heritage and definitely research it
The Cherokee spoken here is of the North Carolina (tsa-la-gi u-we-ti) dialect. I am of the Oklahoma Cherokee but am still able to understand most of what has been said in Cherokee dialogue in these videos!!
me too
@H S yes
I am from Claremore oklahoma and am trying to learn my native tongue I have no more elders in my family that can teach me how to read my Cherokee to english dictionary it's hard to understand how to pronounce the syllables can you please help so our language doesn't die I know I am only a quarter Cherokee but one drop of blood and pride is all it takes spread our seed
Do you know of the mercers in adia ok
Great! Keep learning and pass it on.
Thank you for preserving the Cherokee language. I'm sixty and this is the first time I've heard it spoken. I have family in Oklahoma that I've never met. I'm proud to be Cherokee.
ditto, I missed so much. was adopted.
Y'all should reach out to them and try to reconnect yourselves! Your heritage is calling you~
The Cherokee dialect of Oklahoma is quite different from what these people in this video speak.
Wayne Warmack there are two dialects
Eastern Band and Western Band being OK I believe
I’m studying
I need to learn the eastern band. Anyone?
Have PRIDE in being able to read, write & speak Cherokee language!!!
The teachers I truly admire!!!
If you know Cherokee you need to teach it to someone, this is a beautiful language that needs to be saved
ᏣᎳᎩ
I wish I had more people to speak it with so I can speak it better than my 3 year old type skill
Yes im Cherokee but American only teach me English
I'm going to bug my grandmother today
Learn it or it will be lost. I don't know how many languages we lose every decade, but it's got to be at least a couple at this rate
Yes
I was from Cherokee NC and my family speaks Cherokee and i went to Cherokee Elementary and middle and high school.
James George You save your people.
i glad it is not lost my family look more white so i was told we hid the fact we were cherokee and understand for the time when they were attack for no reason but wish we would have keep it up in secret so it would not be lost to me and any kids i have to where we have to find a different way to learn it
Hi, I'm trying to learn my Cherokee language! I am Cherokee woman and Irish, but I am grateful to be Cherokee! My great grandmother was full blood Cherokee Indian! I remember her but vaguely, because I was only around 5 years old when I talked to her! I can't even remember my grandmothers name! My mom and dad both Cherokee Indian and Irish! I don't know how much Cherokee I have but I'm going to try my best to learn my Cherokee language! Thank you for being there my Cherokee brother! Lori Hightower, my maiden name! Lori Sanders is my married name! I always keep my maiden name because I am very proud of it! Thanks for reading my massage, Lori Hightower Sanders. 'Ye Ho Waa' Am I saying the Creators name right?
Hi, I'm trying to learn my Cherokee language! I am Cherokee woman and Irish, but I am grateful to be Cherokee! My great grandmother was full blood Cherokee Indian! I remember her but vaguely, because I was only around 5 years old when I talked to her! I can't even remember my grandmothers name! My mom and dad both Cherokee Indian and Irish! I don't know how much Cherokee I have but I'm going to try my best to learn my Cherokee language! Thank you for being there my Cherokee brother! Lori Hightower, my maiden name! Lori Sanders is my married name! I always keep my maiden name because I am very proud of it! Thanks for reading my message, Lori Hightower Sanders. 'Ye Ho Waa' Am I saying the Creators name right?
Lori Hightower Sanders Sanders !! I'm searching RUclips as I just found out that my husband is Cherokee, Irish and German! I love learning and think it would be amazing to bring some of the Cherokee tongue and culture into my kids lives!
This was the very best and most positive Documentary I have seen to date of the Cherokee Native American Indian people and I would wish this type of development upon all the many different Native American Indian Tribes in America if that was at all possible. Where there is a will there is a way and this is admirable. The most positive thing being the family units schooling together with the very small children learning from and with the elders. I also admired the School set up and the dedicated staff and using the best of both worlds with technology, Tablets and computers and what struck me was the Language is what the Cherokee people are about and it is who they are. This was brilliant and I was so pleased and so happy to see that 12,000 years of heritage is not being lost and there is a hope to preserve it and push forward with the children to maintain it and develop and grow so they have bi-lingual children who's first love is their own mother tongue. I wish the parents who do not know it could learn it too by returning to school that would ensure saving the language from extinction . This was amazing, well done and I wish you all great joy and happiness and success
we all been lied to here is the truth
ruclips.net/video/LkL1NCMXYEQ/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/A6G9j-A5wUs/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/Y5WM6o_P-34/видео.html
Just stop it you probably know exactly what I know and know these people aren't indigenous to america
I sure hope the Cherokee's don't lose their language.
2016stormy its being taught in the schools there. My husband is eastern band in Nc.
Gina Jumper The last speaker of the wichita language died last year. She said when she was young many spoke the language, but when she got old, she was the only one left that spoke it.
2016stormy that's terrible...wish it had been taught to others
@@stormy-le6pb
What a sad story.
I'm a Saami from the north of Norway, so I do indeed understand and feel the pain of that last speaker.
Greetings from me,
who would like to learn Cherokee if I knew how
They have immersion schools in Oklahoma where English isnt allowed and the headstart teaches Cherokee. I wanted my kids in the immersion class after headstart but didnt get them in :-( they are forgetting what they learned
I would love to go learn the language. It's amazing that this is possible, today. It gives me joy to know the language is being revitalized and preserved.
ᎣᏍᏓ ᎾᏕᎦ ᏣᎳᎩ ᎦᏬᏂᎯᏍᏗ ᎠᏂᏬᏂᎭ ᏥᎪᏩᏘ ᎦᏬᏂᎯᏍᏗ ᎠᎴ ᎠᏂᏴᏫᏯ ᎤᏠᏱ
osda nadega tsalagi gawonihisdi aniwoniha tsigowati gawonihisdi ale aniyvwiya utloyi
It is great to see Cherokee language being spoken. Language is the same as our native people.
well now
ruclips.net/video/LkL1NCMXYEQ/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/A6G9j-A5wUs/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/Y5WM6o_P-34/видео.html
The script/alphabet is beautiful. Really cool to see.
I know this is from years ago, but I wish you or someone you know would volunteer to add Cherokee to Duolingo. Almost all of their lessons are done by volunteers.
They've been adding Navajo slowly, but I'd prefer Cherokee since that's in my ancestry. It is such a beautiful language, to me
CHIA PALA, TOHBI, OKLUSHINLA OFI!!!!!
Pia “LUSA”, pia->Ne’ohklillica!!!!!!! NANAPALO!
Chia NE Issish CHEROKEE OFI!
“HOPIA”, Ne’ohklillica!
“CHIA”? Charokee? NE!
FUCK’IN FUGASI!🖕🏽
@@og-greenmachine8623 it's funny you say something so rude but under the assumption neither I nor most anyone else will understand you.
ᎪᎵᎦ ᎤᏁᎦ ᎦᏁᎦ ᏥᎾᎳ ᎠᏎᏃ ᏲᏁᎦ ᎤᏓᏅᏖᏙᏗ ᎯᎾᎳᏐᎢ ᎩᎦᎨᏯ ᎰᎯᏳᎲᏍᎦ ᎢᏳᏍᏗ
All my life, my native tounge had been denied me. Now too old to learn. Still, it's sound haunts my spirit. Like a dying man on a desert craves water. Yet, water upon touching his lips are too parched to receive. Still he guzzles it down. Knowing the fleeting moments won't last. Like the broken child's heart. The Spirit cries for more.
It's been a long time coming.
Ilisimallarutin,
aasii utuqqaŋitchutin kiŋuġautchimik.
You can learn,
and you are never too old.
@@Siqaiyuk ruclips.net/video/pAgnJDJN4VA/видео.html = Highway 22 = Franklinville = Frankenstein = King of the Dead = Copper Head = Safe Passage = Dead Woods = Wake Forest = Mount Pilot = ruclips.net/video/3W6mDUmPZ0Y/видео.html = All Pine = Land of Rattlers = Moving Land Marker = Mound Builders = ruclips.net/video/HSC9cgvtkRs/видео.html = Billy the Kid = Covid = ruclips.net/video/uVXR2LYeFBI/видео.html = To share a name = John's Dirty Lennon = 3Rd White Raven = Grey Wolf = ruclips.net/video/QkF3oxziUI4/видео.html = Will .i. am Son of David = Full Wool Worth = February Seventh = Winter Solider = Under Taker = Raven and Dolphin = Randolph County = Devil's Stomping Ground = Cider Square
Learn it anyway, you are never too old, I plan on walking the trail of tears and the AT I'm 60 next month, I'll be using a rollater if I have to
Too old to learn is a lame excuse
this is really sad but true the government doesn't help they don't offer any language classes for cherokee and they also don't really teach much about anything native american in schools today its like they wanna get rid of our whole race but they forget that we were here first .
Katie Cook yet they shove slavery history down everyone's throat... And leave out Native History.... Its unreal....
@@denepride2910 ♥👍
Dene Pride sad but true.
Look, you're gonna have to fight for it. Everyone takes care of their own and not much more beyond.
Be the leader others need you to be.
Katie Cook they are not teaching history of any people correctly. I have Cherokee on my Mama’s side of our family and what I know is what I learned from her just not the language
Siyo! I am of ᏣᎳᎩ (Tsalagi or Cherokee for readers who don't know) heritage and am trying to learn the language, but it is hard as I do not know anyone who speaks it and I live in Fl. So glad to have all of the language videos, books, and apps though.
A Girl And her Glock same. Difficult to find organized instructional materials.
Look at the Shiyo App!
Appalachia's Homestead with Patara that’s the only app I’ve been able to find useful
Language is the reservoir of a culture. It's touching to see a precious culture staying alive or starting to strive again. Keep up the good work, You guys can do it! Blessings from Asia!
This is an excellent video on the Cherokee language. I’m so relieved to hear about the immersion schools; they are a sure way to increase native speakers. I’m not American Indian, but value their histories, languages and cultures. I’m sure there are tribes that are entirely gone, and that’s a tragedy. Bless all who work to the preserve and restore their richness.
Can you record your elders? It wouldn’t be enough, but it might help.
Definitely helps, of course with their permission and a nice outfit many of them would like to share some history.
Anyone is welcome to learn Cherokee. You can too.
This is so tragic yet inspirational. Nothing can break the Native American Indian Spirit. Bless you all. May Cherokee flourish
I wish the Cherokee people all the best of success in their revitalization efforts.
I'm so glad you are saving your language.
Please keep teaching children our language .Don't let it go away. Verona from Nashville Tennessee I Love & mis All of you. In my thoughts & Prayers.
It would be so sad if we lost the Cherokee language. I'm 77 yrs. Old ! And I have lost it. I'm to learn it. Never too old to learn. I'm only 1/8 th Cherokee and I feel inside more Cherokee than any other.
I am so glad that my Cherokee grandfather taught me to speak our language beginning when I was 4 years old.
Of course, at the time, I wasn't very happy about it.
But at 65, I'm so happy that my grandchildren are learning to speak Cherokee from me.
Blessings to all of you for preserving our language.
It's my opinion that a Tribal language is paramount to maintaining its culture.
Be well ...
The same happened in my country Ireland our native language and religion was outlawed hundreds of year's ago by the English..
Irish sounds 100% more beautiful than boring English. They're revitalizing Irish/Gaelic! Go Ireland!
Our Aunt was the only one to apply for and receive tribal recognition within the Eastern Band of Cherokee, I did all the research and my wife helped to get the documentation prepared. I sent it to all my mothers family members, all Cherokee on the mothers side, Grandfather full-blooded Cherokee but not on the dowels rolls!!! Grandmothers people were though. All Born and raised in Eastern United States. It is sad that many of us never learned about our Native culture and the Language and will soon be lost, you may only have one drop left, but when you have no culture and no language one drop makes only the smallest contribution!!! Yet it still give us hope!!! Dennison and Nicholson were my connection to the Tribes of Cherokee. I remember one set of Names were George and Martha Dennison, wink wink!!!
My grandmother took the trail you seen on the map that goes to Iuka, Mississippi in the northeastern part of the state and escaped the trail of tears. My family is still here in northeast Mississippi. She was the last person in my family to speak the language.
Exceptional documentary. In the UK, the Welsh have fought hard to keep their language. I believe the best solution is to start teaching a child both English and Cherokee from the youngest age possible. Ages 1 - 4 are the ideal window. We lose half of our lifetime amount of brain cells by the time we turn 5. This early overabundance of brain cells is designed to give their mind the ability to absorb as much knowledge as possible. My niece speaks both English and Italian fluently because my mother-in-law has only spoken Italian to her from the day she was born. The rest of her world is English. So, just one person taught her fluent Italian by the time she was 5. This shows how easily a child can learn multiple languages at this vital age I mention.
Good Cherokee people, teach them young! Save your heritage.
When the children go home, they need to teach their parents' the Cherokee language. Just a few words at a time. Possibily as a homework assignment. That way the children will feel extra smart. And it could end up helping their parents learn too. Plus, this will help reinforce and ingrain the language into their souls.
Fantastic idea! I would love it.
That is good.
Some things to do at home for the kids to retain what they learn is to put labels around the house in the language like table ,bed plates cups these little things help them retain what they have learnt .As a Maori you see a lot of this in maori homes for both the parents to learn and children to retain.Hope this helps
I wish you so much luck and success with your project. Greetings from Germany:-)
I recognized my ex sister in-law working with kids from her reservation & I am so proud of what she does. Way to go Nancy H.!👍
What an informative video!! Very inspiring and fruitful example of language revitalization efforts!!! Hope this will inspire others to help preserve their own dying languages and dialects..... when a language dies, knowledge dies with it... Thank you for producing and sharing this documentary.
I don't want to loose your language!! It is very important to me and I am Half Italian and Irish× English ,my grandfather told me as a child that on his fathers side of the family that we have Indian, native American mixed into us & I was just 7or8 years of age and I jumped for joy ,no grandfather spoke no words ,he was a yound toddler when his father went home to our Creator ,I cryed right soon as I got out of grandfather's site,then my Grammy came into my bedding area to see why I was crying, I beg add n to tell her why ...can understand and speak Italian ,not fluently ,I definitely understand what my Nona is saying lol she got her point across ,belive me ,she spoke broken English they called it..I hope that they keep speaking your language full time ...Thank you very much for sharing your video and knowledge with me ,I do appreciate it !
Then please teach us! Don't send us away! My 2nd great grandmother was Southwestern SC reservation, a Wolfe and the government shrank the territory so she married a scots-irish. Now I'm beggining to find a way to learn tsalagi and when I contacted the eastern band council the receptionist laughed at me and told me I was lied to! No.. my ancestor is cherokee! I have almost black hair and dark eyes and I tan like nobody's business! Someone up there please give me the time of day and understand your old territory went right to Columbia SC.. well past my location range! I was once in your reservation land and I'm DYING to know "my" original language!! But laughing at those who are no longer in your reservation territory is not the way to go if you want to preserve the language! I learn fast, and want to know my ancestors' language way of life! Give us "mixed breeds" a chance here!
theclanplus1 i know your struggle. many of us mix bloods aren't accepted by indigenous communities. its a shame bc you have young children growing up on rez lands not interested in learning more about the language as they are graphed into this colonize world. then u have us mix blood who want to learn and preserve the history and culture and language but we are turned away and called lyers and wannabe. to save this language and culture minds do need to be more open to mix blooded ppls. if you can PROVE your ancestral tides through DNA then i would like to the tribal communities become more open to at least teaching language and cultural aspects of the tribe.... im not askinh to move to the rez... im happy here where i am living because i know its historically original Aniyunwiya land. i would just like to learn the language so i can speak to creator in the language.
theclanplus1 the Dobbs are on the Baker Rolls, but because my direct ancestor was in KY as early as 1902 when my grandma's mom was born in a mountainside mining camp, and there's no birth certificate or SSN, I'm in the same boat. The traditions and language will die without us descendants that want to learn and carry on. Less than 2% of all the people in the whole US can legally prove tribal membership to colonists, an unfortunately, tribes have abandoned traditional oral history
@Morningstar My paternal Great Grandma's maiden name is Dobbs, yes!
Same!! My granny was Cherokee Irish!
You're not really "mixed breed" you're at most 12 % Native American, thats not being mixed LOL. You are like 80 % White European, but if you do want to honor your ancestors, help the community, do more things for native people, give money, help elders etc.
"I am a person of this place." I understand that as a feeling. I feel that I belong to the land where I live. I eat the wild berries from the forest . I eat the fish from the creek. I build my home from the trees.
I’m definitely not Cherokee but I’ve spoke broken Cherokee since I was 12 since my grandma wanted me to speak it and I was just humoring her. Now I’m 23 and I speak it to my children and learn more everyday. It’s kept them safe from strangers before or saved them from embarrassment. Now it’s more of a time capsule and a story for my grandma as shes gotten much older since then.
Now my husband, adopted from Korea and into a totally white family, wants me to teach him lately. It makes families closer, I believe.
Howd your grandmother come about speaking it?
That's my grandma Mary brown ❤️
Bless her!
Do they accept white Cherokee? I know someone who is white but his DNA test I seen he is 49 percent but looks white. He was born in the mountains
@@mossyoak5169 that 64x64 resolution image gotchu hot huh
@@studypartner9643 white means nothing. Being able to prove your ancestry is what's important. At least to the Cherokee nation in Oklahoma
I meet her once many years ago thru my uncle Red Crow
I just learned about my Cherokee lineage two years ago by my 92 year old Grandmother at the time. My Grandmother has been completely assimilated into the white way. She can not teach me anything. I believe that I am the only one she confided to about our bloodline. When I asked my Aunt she had no idea what I was talking about. I am so saddened by this.
Probably not all the way Cherokee, most native people can't pass for white. It's only the very mixed one that are able to, so that's why you guys are not aware of that ancestry. Still you are white with a small amount of cherokee so please do things for other natives. Being Native is more than just a "bloodline" it's about protecting native culture and its people.
U might have to find other ways to connect to your Native side
That sounds like my family
Get your $5.00 back
CHIA PALA, TOHBI, OKLUSHINLA OFI!!!!!
Pia “LUSA”, pia->Ne’ohklillica!!!!!!! NANAPALO!
Chia NE Issish CHEROKEE OFI!
“HOPIA”, Ne’ohklillica!
“CHIA”? Charokee? NE!
FUCK’IN FUGASI!🖕🏽
My great grandmother spoke nothing but Cherokee, my mother, unfortunately never spoke it.
yea that is one of the problems with Cherokee is the language generation gap that my family has as well. my grandfather spoke but it wasn't passed down to my mom and I am trying to pick it back up
It was my grandfather's first language, and when he spoke you could tell english was his second. However it was illegal to be caught speaking native languages then and if he taught my father, my father hid it (he hid much of his father's teaching as he said it went against his christianity and refused to teach me). My dad and his brother's were the first to be born away from Oklahoma since my ancestors were moved there. I know of my heritage, but was intentionally disconnected from it because white traditions were more acceptable to my Dad (I think because he and my uncle's were picked on because of their heritage).
My grandmother's grandfather was Cherokee I wish I knew more of my great grandfather, when I hear the language or music I feel my heart & soul is saddened, maybe because my heart & soul remembers something that my conscience doesn't. Or I have a deep desire to know my ancestry & feel lost.
I feel lost. Like part of me is missing. Not knowing my true heritage
My Father was raised in Cowee, I in Nikwasi (Franklin)... my great grandmother was full Cherokee and it made me so happy to hear these places named in this documentary, we will keep this place alive. Cherokee language is still taught at Cherokee (NC) schools... so there is hope.
I know it sucks to have to claim a relative for this, but it can and should matter to us to keep it alive.
I wish there was an online community for those of us who would love to learn our native tongue. I would love to learn Cherokee, I would freely speak my native language. It's bs they encourage kids to learn other languages but ban ours, the true language of this land we share. I think they want to smear us out because they are truly scared of us, if they tear us down we will never rise, ensuring their plan that we won't rise again. WE WILL NEVER BE SNUFFED OUT...we will always remain!
@@STOB-STICKSON wow, what a useful page. Thanks for posting.
The US state has committed so many crimes and needs to start standing up for it!
I had a vision where this was happening. I lived it for a few months then I was knocked out and ended up in a low place. The graves were being given proper burial. The industry age had ended. I hope I can make it back...
It’s beautiful language. What a wonderful film! I learned a lot.
This was wonderful! It's very inspiring and I learned a lot.
Shirley, please keep teaching the Cherokee language.
Thank you for this beautiful film. I am so hopeful for the Cherokee people to keep their language spoken.
I think my Cherokee blood is the reason I feel a strong will to live off the land.
I think my Irish blood is the reason I feel a strong will to eat potatoes and be an alcoholic.
i think my american blood is the reason i feel proud, strong, and independent.
I think my English blood makes me drink tea.
@@CheeseDBD And what exactly is "American blood"? LOL
I am waiting for the day when America will have Indian president either from Lakota Onondaga Cherokee navazzo Cheyenne or whosoever. But it must be an Indian that's it. I cry for Lakota. Perhaps you all know the situation of Dakota county.
This film is so beautifully made and so important - I have cried many times while watching, and I feel for/with the people of these ancient and living valleys
Yes! Keep the language. It is part of your heritage.
My father was Wyandot. Our language is basically dead, only maybe 9 speakers left.
@wiilliamssporing1500 Aren't the Wyandot doing anything about teaching the language to the young? Your tribe is going to be like the Wichita Indians, whose last speaker died last year. She said she heard it spoken all the time when she was young but when she got old, she was the only one could speak it and she was half white and half Wichita.
@@tippy550storm yes, they are reviving the language. The Wyandot are all out west in Oklahoma and Kansas. I live in Kentucky, so I’m pretty much on my own. I am slowly picking some things up.
It hurts my heart to know your people have suffered so much by the Caucasians as my people have. I also know many other peoples have suffered as your people. But I am also happy to learn that you’re teaching your children to speak the language. I am Hawaiian mixed with some Chinese. My father was a Native Hawaiian whose first language was hawaiian and lived when it was still outlawed to speak our native tongue. So he and our elders would speak it in the privacy of homes and private meetings. He would not speak to us his children in Hawaiian at all. Only words here and there. When I finally learned why my father did not teach or raise us speaking tHawaiian, it hurt my heart. We now have Hawaiian Immersion charter schools too, which I’m grateful for. Preservation of your culture and language is so important because to lose it completely is to say they win. Their purpose was to assimilate your and my people into their culture and language to get rid of anything that was part of our lives. It’s history repeating itself over and over.
I hope that one day, when this program has not failed but PERSEVERED, to take my own children to the summer school to learn this beautiful language and keep it going. I would recommend a program for parents as well... at least basics to keep it living and refreshing until the continuing years for our children. Beautiful, informative video. Thank you!
persevered is good but revitalized is better and you are right about getting parents involved it is hard for the children to continue speaking when the people around you don't speak
Cherokee is an Iroquian language, which is quite different from the indo European languages. So of course there vocab will be different. Seems like Cherokee has cases as well, quite a few. Just like the Italic languages.
I really can appreciate the older generation wanting to teach the children the language and the culture of their nation.
My Grand father came back from the reservation in Oklahoma back to Alabama and eventually to the Cherokees beloved North Georgia. The language was lost in my family. Many not knowing their Cherokee Ancestry . There are other Cherokee in my Ancestory on both sides of my family. My Grandmother knew many ways of her culture and heritage yet very little of her language. I learned so much following her around the east Tennessee ridges and valleys, looking for medicinal plants, roots, berry's and materials for making a variety of items. preservation and making textiles, beadwork and basket making were fading in her years but she passed on as much as she knew. Her knowledge including, gardening, farming and the love for the earth was her blessing to myself and my sister. My Cherokee heritage is is instilled, cherished and loved in my heart. I pray the culture, syllabary and language are forever preserved. It is more than a culture, it is a respectful, moral way of daily living.
I really hope Cherokee becomes worldwide one day. I don't know if I can learn it, but I'll definitely try!!
Blessing for all your hard work, for what you do for these Children. Studies show all children who learn a two languages gain a peak advantage in learning.
our language was beaten out of us
it was forbidden to speak
Cherokee especially in the Christian boarding prisons
There is nothing Christian about treating Cherokee or any tribe that way.
Karen Partin actually it's very characteristic of Christianity. The entire history of Christianity has been that way. Christianity is a patriarchal religion and has always attacked and destroyed matrilineal cultures
TheHikarianz k u tell me the people because everywhere Christians go turns out worse especially for women and homosexuals
TheHikarianz u kno also, it seems like u more than me insulting your people.. you are saying your people's own ways (whatever they were -remains unclear) were abhorrent, the only thing that redeems your people is the other ways forced upon them. So essentially your people were inherently abhorrent? Anyways obviously I don't know anything about the situation. But that's how it sounds to me. I'd be interested in your follow up
If you think I insult my own people I don't wanna waste my precious time to argue with you. I try my best to live christian values and I don't want to spend much time to argue on internet. Christian haters are everywhere on internet as if cursing christian is their own permanent job although statistically they might be fewer than christians. However I respect your choice to live in deep hatred toward christians. You may hate me but I don't hate you.
I caught a glimpse of Beloved Man and instantly knew I had to see this. Rest gently to the Great Spirit, Elder.
They used to teach that Hebrew was a dead language when I was in school. After the Six Day War they found out it wasn't. Don't let your language, traditions and beliefs die.
Keep going teaching the kids their heritage and their language it's so very important.
Sounds like a mix of vietnamese, cantonese, and korean
Beautiful so proud to see teaching the Language that for a very long time was forbidden this is amazing and made the great spirit continue to guild and mother earth continue to keep our people of all our Surviving Tribes thank you for this amazing opportunity🦅🪶🦅
Native tounge is dangerous to the enemies because so few people can understand it
Not these days, not with the internet at our fingertips.
Heritage is so important to all people of the world.
Tom Belt,Loud and clear.Love You and gUrls,Save the language,
Haida Gwai stands with You
I wish this had ten million more views.
Watching this in 2021. We have witnessed a full year of this SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) pandemic... Hearing fluent Cherokee (or Tsalagi Gawonihisdi) for the first time brought me to tears. 2021 marks the 200th anniversary of the founding of the Cherokee written syllabary. I dread to ask these questions now... How many Cherokee people have they lost? How many of their elders died because of this pandemic? I hope the Cherokee Nations will recover and heal. I hope all Indigenous peoples and their cultures will flourish again.
So honored to have had the opportunity to view this beautiful culture,thank you much ❤️
50 second, you said lost everything. I feel same heart. The scene. Same. We say soc-dae, 솟대. The first sound of Society and daddy, soc + da.. im korean, your ancient relative,
This touches my heart and brings me JOY. Thank you for sharing tthis message of hope and peace.
Wado for this wonderful documentary.
Ꮹ
I am so glad I found this. VERY GOOD. I have a book of the Cherokee language. Please DO everything you can to keep the language ALIVE!
Very interesting series of videos
Osiyo, Dohitsu ?
Hello, how are you ?
My Cherokee great great grandma was owned by a black northern lights family & severely beaten like a wild beast ! But she survived & was rescued by a sweet southern Carolina man who married her & became free to speak & think & live her life !
Oddly, even those who claimed we were a lesser then slaves not even considered smart enough of able enough to do anything right, we proved them all wrong & did so many incredibly amazing life changing things ! Thank you for this video !
Sincerely Pawl-Wadw / Paul~.
@5:17 Hav3 you heard a more absurd concept than to Americanize Cherokee? That's like saying the the We have to Greekify the Spartans. The Cherokee are more American than apple pie.
Preserve your native language, I think it is mystical and resonates the connection to nature and balance. This world doesn't need a unified language because heritage and tradition becomes washed.
i love to learn the Cherokee language
Yeah it's fair
@@davidnorton3139 ya y your y y. areas will 6 ya. areas 7 h 6h y y.if your your included with this your. if a if 6 if y y.7 ya your. puppy. we you.y y y ya 😳 ya y 6x7 few y yo u r you. you. u know y.
Keep up the great work,keep teaching the children the Cherokee language and way of life.my grandmother was fcherokee.i don't know if she spoke the language or not I wish I did.i'am almost 70 year's old.
blessings for sharing, wado
we are still here
Thank you for sharing.
My family is all Cherokee I'd love to learn to speak the language.
Great, the young has the opportunity to learn original language, very fortunate!
I'm Cherokee from SC my grandmother full blooded Cherokee I'm so proud of it
Wonderful thanks for posting this my granddaughter is interested in her native culture.
I truly truly wish i could speak my cherokee langue..cherokee have suffer more then any other tribes in this world ..altho i LOVE being half cherokee no one will take that away from me
Download the shiyo app
It will help
I was raised and still live in Duplin/Wayne county NC and was never exposed to any Native culture in school and even community...I don't even know how to find out what tribes actually lived in either county but I really would love to be able to learn! I admire the elders of the Cherokee for caring for the next generation and passing down such a treasure such as the language....Much love and respect to all of you teaching and learning!
2019 May 5, Cherakee is Still Relavent........
HAYA HAYA
Love our Cherokee, NC and it's people. So glad to hear they are teaching their young the language and culture. Cherokee was one of the most wonderful places to get to vacation when we were growing up. They shared their culture and earned a living doing it. Who wouldn't enjoy the outdoor drama "Unto These Hills " and the historical Indian village? If the younger generation isn't taught how is all that going to survive? I haven't been there in more than ten years. I truly hope all that is still there. The last time I was there it appeared the casinos had robbed the village of its uniqueness. Hopefully by now they have found a way to profit from their casinos and rebuild and continue to share their culture in the village. Love the documentary.
This language sounds somewhat similar in tonality to Japanese, and some other Asian languages
There is no tone in Japanese. You might have been thinking of Chinese Languages.
Japanese is not tonal. However, Cherokee is, and you are right it sounds a bit like an east asian language but also as a native mexican language such as mixtec wich is also a tonal language.
@@quetzalcoatl3242 yeah the tsalagi were essentially Mayans thousands of years ago but then the Aztec went nuts and started slaughtering whole tribes.. so they migrated all the way up to the north east coast and eventually assimilated into Iroquois and settled as their southern border against the creek..... so yeah the language should definitely be similar to native "mexican" languages
Study genetics And ancient migration patterns and it’ll make sense
Us natives our origin is
Asia
Beringia
That is where they were before travel down so you’re correct.
Your heritage is a good one. My family and I support this.
Wow they showed real Cherokees and not people claiming their great grandma was a Cherokee princess but look mega white
Yeah I can't stand the super white folks that claim Cherokee heritage. Don't get me wrong, there are white Cherokee (I am one because I am Cherokee and German) but it's always "My great grandmother was a Cherokee, and her name was Sneaking Fox" or some shit.
@@twospiritbanjo true or like my grandmother's name was crouching bear😂😂
@@dalendriver8265 I hate it 🤣 I'm a pale skin native, but I'm still native. I went to school with kids that have none of the features but claim to be native. My grandmother is full blood and her husband is Melungeon (Cherokee, Dutch, and black). My mom is Dutch white and cannot tan. I'm white, but 10 minutes in the sun and I look like oven baked turkey 😂
@@twospiritbanjo that damn baked Turkey part got me😂😂
@@dalendriver8265 🤣🤣🤣
I'm watching from my camper home with my 2 dogs in Clanton Alabama
The language sounds Asian similar to Hmong and the other mountain Asian tribes all over Asia.
My great-grandfather was said to have came from Cherokee in the late 1800s this video was helpful an interesting my heritage thank you
Proud people!
I LOVE your beautiful language, thank you fo sharing your sacredness! A Beautiful treasure ❣️
Ha, your man in the Wānanga o Aotearoa tshirt. Kia kaha!
chur bro
@@steveboy7302 ...Ka kaha
kia kaha
I think that school is an AMAZING thing you are doing. That really is the only was to preserve the Cherokee language and culture. I hope you can continue doing the good things you are doing with the children of your community. I've visited Cherokee nc. My ex husband is Cherokee and I felt so much at home there. It's such a spiritual place. One of my best friends was also Cherokee and she actually spoke the language a bit. Idk how much she did. We didn't have enough time on earth together. She passed away at 40 years old. She was teaching me all the ways of the culture and I continue to practice them and continue to learn.
to preserve the language anyone who wants to learn it (native or not) should be allowed to learn it. Desperate times call for desperate measures. Just like science. Those who see the importance of it should be allowed to learn it FREE because it's something Christians and the religious are trying to take away
I don't want to see it taken away and I'm a child of God.
I have Cherokee blood in me and I'm a Christian.
I hate how the Cherokee and other tribes were treated.
What Christian and religious people are trying to take it away? Cherokee is spoken at several churches, don't be ignorant.
no thats why there are problems because the white man thinks he can do anything he wants
Great work.. all around.. Editing. Producing.. The whole package! Glad to see the world still has Warriors!
God Bless
-Jason
This was an interesting video. It’s sad to even imagine that one’s language, culture, or family would no longer exist in one’s own lifetime.
What you do if you could prevent that from happening?
Are you Awake? 🗣🤔
Language is a vital link to our culture. I teach my grandchildren because it is the voice of their ancestors.