Latest Posts

Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Mobile Phone Dictionaries

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009 by daryn

It looks like some advancements have been made in this area, at present a Kaurna demo dibtionary has been made available.

Here are some links to websites for further information:

http://blogs.usyd.edu.au/elac/2008/07/mobile_phone_dictionaries.html

http://pfed.info/

and an online demo at

http://www.pfed.info/wksite/onlinedemo/onlinedemo.html

Thanks to James Leech for keeping us informed of this

VN:F [1.1.3_449]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)

Gayarragi, Winangali

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009 by daryn

Received an email today from Des Crump who has made us aware of this new multimedia resource which has just been made available as a download from the web, here are the details:

Website http://lah.soas.ac.uk/projects/gw/

Excerpt from website:

Gayarragi, Winangali is an interactive multimedia resource for Gamilaraay and Yuwaalaraay, languages of northern New South Wales, Australia (see pop-up maps). Gayarragi, Winangali was produced as a CD-ROM but is also available by download (about 200MB, Win XP/Vista).

Gayarragi, Winangali is a resource for language learners at all levels, and for anyone interested in the Gamilaraay and Yuwaalaraay languages. It contains extensive language resources, including audio:

  • a searchable Gamilaraay Yuwaalaraay Dictionary with over 2,600 entries, all including audio
  • 957 spoken sentences from traditional speakers, all transcribed, and hyperlinked to the dictionary
  • 30 songs and 14 stories, all transcribed, and hyperlinked to the dictionary
  • games, including crosswords and memory/matching games
  • other language resources as pdf and text files

So go and have a look, it looks like a great resource to have for learners of this language but also a good example of using technology as a language learning tool.

VN:F [1.1.3_449]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)

Missing in Action - Never

Friday, May 16th, 2008 by admin

Well its been a month since my last post and I am sorry that I have not been able to keep people up to date with happenings in the world of Aboriginal Languages and Technology, so I have some time to make up.

At the end of April I was very fortunate to attend the 15th Stabilizing Indigenous Languages conference in Flagstff, Arizona, and what a conference it was. I learnt so much from this in many ways I’m still taking it all in.  So expect more news of it soon.

Currently I am in Melbourne at the “Openroad - Multilinguism and the Information Society” conference held at the State Library of Victoria, hosted by VicNet. I think I have that right.  Well this conference is a bit daunting as I am the only Aboriginal person at it, but neverless our issues, challenges and successes are not just limited to our own languages but thers as well, so it is here as well that I am gaining more knowledge to help share with others and to assist in supporting our work further language maintenance.

VN:F [1.1.3_449]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)

The Indigenous Languages Institute 2008

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008 by admin

Straight from the ILI website

As part of LingFest 2008, the Indigenous Languages Institute will run for 3 days: Tues 8 – Thurs 10 July 2008 at the Koori Centre of the University of Sydney. The Indigenous Languages Institute will be a useful forum for a wide range of people working in the area of the revival and maintenance of Australian Indigenous languages.

The Indigenous Languages Institute will have a few focus areas, including:
· language policy and planning
· languages and music
· Aboriginal languages phonology
· grammatical aspects of Aboriginal languages
· issues of language revival and maintenance.

The audience for the Indigenous Languages Institute will include:
· Indigenous tertiary students in education, languages, linguistics
· Aboriginal community language teachers
· Language and culture centre workers and other community organisations
· Teachers, including languages teachers, Aboriginal teachers and teacher students
· Postgraduates and potential postgraduates in education, languages, linguistics
· Linguists and other interested academics.

VN:F [1.1.3_449]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)

Don’t take language for granted

Monday, February 18th, 2008 by admin

Monica Davis, 16 February 2008, Saturday     

More than 7,000 languages will die over the next century, leaving a dangerous vacuum in the human body politic. For it is the language of the people, which reflects its soul, and the cumulative soul of the human race is slowly disintegrating.

OUR WORDS, language and history are intricately woven together, none complete without the other. So often, we take all of them for granted, assuming that we will always be able to speak, communicate and discourse. But, that is not always true, not for those whose speech is impaired, or whose minds will no longer allow them to manipulate words, concepts, ideas and message. And it is most certainly not true of those whose memories are so terrible, that they burn in the telling.

All over the world, through the ravages of time, we are losing our elders, losing touch with our oral history, and slowly drifting away from the anchors of civilised culture. For many native people, those whose numbers are rapidly dwindling, this is a living death.

A Lakota (also called Sioux) friend of mine is engaged in an oral history project, which may well take her years to complete. She is chronicling the life experiences and oral traditions of several Lakota female elders on the Pine Ridge Reservation in Pine Ridge, South Dakota.

In native cultures around the world, the elders are dying, and taking their native languages to the grave with them. People whose numbers once ranged into the millions are now down to a handful of native speakers, and, when those speakers die, so does the language of their respective cultures.

According to linguists, more than 7,000 languages will die over the next century, leaving a dangerous vacuum in the human body politic. For it is the language of the people, which reflects its soul, and the cumulative soul of the human race is slowly disintegrating.

Our vibrant languages, tongues, which have a dozen words for ice, or lyrical languages that soothe the soul, even though the listener doesn’t understand a word, are slowly fading into oblivion. With the disappearance of those languages, goes a piece of human history, which can never be recreated by human hands.

For all of our arrogance, for all of our hijacking of the word ‘civilisation’, western man is woefully ignorant of the language, folkways and history of the world in which he lives. Sadly, he parades his ignorance as superiority, and has spent centuries destroying other cultures, uncaring of the knowledge that was lost with his plundering, as have barbarians who long came before him.

Native American language and culture have been under assault for generations, particularly by federal policies in both the United States and Canada. From the mid-nineteenth century until as late as 1975, hundreds of thousands of native children were forced to attend distant ‘residential schools’ from the age or 4 or 5 to 16. And, in those ensuing years, they were forbidden to use their native tongue, forbidden to come home, forcibly separated from the culture, which gave birth to them.

Lawsuits have been filed over the alleged abuse, rape and murder, which reportedly took place in those schools, but, for those who survived, the separation from family, adults and culture took a heavy toll.

Culture is passed from one generation to another, as is civilised behaviour, socialisation and language. Forcible assimilation, distant schooling at extremely young ages, in addition to the reported rape, beating and murder, which many residential school attendees say was endemic in both Canada and the United States, took a heavy toll on indigenous populations in North America.

Many people blame the madness in the ‘residential schools’ to much of the dysfunction in today’s Native American and indigenous enclaves. Referring to alleged atrocities at the residential schools, William Combs told reporters, “I saw children being buried at the Catholic residential school in Kamloops. I saw a lot of kids die there. I’m upset the church has gotten away with murdering them.” (Aboriginal survivors Press Release)

How many of the residential school students have Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome (PTSD), due to their years of residence at these schools? How many generations of dysfunctional adults passed their own dysfunction on to their kids and communities?

Now, in addition to the cultural trauma of having children ripped from their cultures for six generations and placed in residential schools, indigenous communities are now dealing with the flip side of residential school’s trans-generational byproduct—parents who have no parenting skills. Today, Native American children are grossly over-represented in the nation’s foster care populations, as the below shown table enumerates.

In some states, Native American children represent as much as 51 per cent of their representative state’s foster care population, while comprising no more than 20 per cent of any one state’s population. In one state, Native American children make up 10 per cent of the state’s foster care population, while only comprising one per cent of the state’s general population. (Press Release, American Indian Children Over represented in Nation’s Foster Care System)

The report, titled Time for Reform: A Matter of Justice for American Indian and Alaskan native children, found that nationally, American Indian and Alaskan native children were reported to the state and found to be victims of child abuse and neglect at the rate of 16.5 per 1,000 American Indian and Alaskan native children. This rate compares to 19.5 for African American children, 16.1 for Pacific Islander children, 10.8 for White children, and 10.7 for Hispanic children. Native American children are more likely than children of other races/ethnicities to be identified as victims of neglect (65.5 per cent), and they are least likely to be identified as victims of physical abuse (7.3 per cent). (Ibid)

Referring to the monies awarded former residents of these residential schools through a class action lawsuit, one angry woman told fellow bloggers that there was no way for the mainstream religious organisations, which perpetrated savageries in the residential school to ever buy their way out of the atrocities. For her, what happened in those schools was perpetrated by monsters, pure and simple. Unfortunately, those deeds of those monsters still lives in the form of the dysfunctional adults, the damaged minds, and the broken souls they left in their wake.

Left behind are a people with an over representation of child neglect, substance abuse and mental anguish, mind pain that is so powerful, even drugs and alcohol cannot hold the memories at bay. The old ways, the language, the ties that bind people together as a culture and community have been under assault for two centuries.

Even more telling about the destruction of a culture is the casual rape perpetrated by males of the so-called dominant culture. Forcible assimilation through kidnapping and residential instruction and de-culturalisation of a culture’s children is only one step in the process of destroying a people. Add sexual attack, rape and dehumanisation to the mix, and you have yet another tier.

There is a Lakota saying, “A people are not defeated until the hearts of its women are on the ground.” In times gone by—and still occurring in some communities, raping a woman of colour was a right of passage, or a proof of manhood for white males. Even today, according to recent case studies, “US indigenous women face 3.5 times the average rate of rape in the US. Some 82 per cent of assailants are white men.”

The Delaney sisters, African American twins who lived well past 100 years of age, related how black families had to keep their female children out of harms way, or, rather out of the way of potential white rapists. Because it didn’t take much for a black man to get lynched in those days, blacks practiced prevention—they kept their daughters as far away from white men as they could, because their fathers were in no position to defend their helpless kin. (Sadie and Bessie Delaney, Having Our Say)

When the last native speaker of these cultures dies, there will be no one left to sing the songs, tell the stories and pass on their legacies. There will be no elders to pass their wisdom on to the next generation. If some have their way, there will be no next generation.

Original Story Here

VN:F [1.1.3_449]
Rating: 0.0/10 (0 votes cast)

Upcoming Conferences

17th Annual Stabilizing Indigenous Languages Conference and
Western Symposium on Language Issues (WeSLI)


June 17th - 20th, 2010
University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, USA

www.uoregon.edu/~nwili/SILS/SILS.html

Funded By

Miromaa is developed from funding received by the Department of Environment, Water, Heritage and the Arts.

inline-wrap-ewha

Our Details

13-15 Watt St
Newcastle NSW 2300

P | 61+02 4927 8222
F | 61+02 4925 2185
E | info@miromaa.com.au

© Arwarbukarl Cultural Resource Association Incorporated 2008
Webdesign by Us.
You can also visit us here at www.arwarbukarl.com.au