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Press Release

May 28, 2004                                                 

SEALASKA HERITAGE TO OFFER TLINGIT IMMERSION RETREAT

Sealaska Heritage Institute is offering a Tlingit immersion retreat near Sitka this summer in an effort to revitalize the endangered language.

Tlingit speakers and serious learners of the language will live in a Tlingit-speaking world 24 hours a day from July 19-30 during the institute’s second annual Tlingit language immersion retreat at Dog Point Fish Camp, called in Tlingit Waashdáanx’.

Participants will arrive by skiff at Waashdáanx’, near the old village of Kalseixht'iká Noow, ready to leave the English language behind for 10 days of immersion in the ancestral language of the region. Students and teachers will cook their own food, wash dishes, and do other daily chores – in Tlingit – just as their ancestors might have done a century ago. 

“The program gives both speakers and learners a habitat where Tlingit can flourish,” said SHI President Rosita Worl. “The immersion approach appears to accelerate the rate at which learners acquire the Tlingit language.”

Daily activities will include gathering and processing Native foods while fluent speakers give directions in Tlingit to language learners. During the institute’s 2003 retreat at Waashdáanx’, participants subsisted on halibut, salmon, gumboots, deer, beach asparagus, seaweed, and wild celery. Participants also will sing, drum, dance and tell stories in Tlingit, allowing even further integration of culture with language.

The retreat is the second held in Sitka since 2003 and the third immersion retreat held so far under a federal grant awarded to the institute in 2002. The grant from the Administration for Native Americans funds two language immersion retreats per year in 2003, 2004 and 2005 in Sitka and the Glacier Bay-Hoonah area. Approximately 74 percent of the project, or $148,000, will be funded through federal dollars and 26 percent will be funded through non-government sources this year.

Native language revitalization is a priority for the institute, a Native nonprofit founded by Sealaska Corp. to perpetuate and enhance Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian cultures. The institute strives to integrate Native language and culture into school curriculum because studies have shown Native students who are exposed to their culture in class do better academically.

Tlingit speakers and learners who want to participate may contact the institute at 463-4844 for more information.
 

CONTACT: Rosita Worl, SHI president, 463.4844