时间:2019-01-12 作者:英语课 分类:2015年VOA慢速英语(十)月


英语课

Young Navajos Study to Save Their Language 年轻的纳瓦霍人拯救他们母语


For part of her life, Sylvia Jackson stopped speaking her native language, Navajo. Like many Native American children, she had little chance to speak her language.


“We had to speak English. So I lost a lot of just speaking the Navajo language.”


More than 100 years ago, the U.S. government began sending Native American children to boarding schools. All the instruction was in English. The native cultures and languages of the children were discouraged.


In the last 20 to 30 years, tribal 1 governments have started to promote the teaching of Native American languages in schools. The U.S. Department of Education now also supports Native American language programs.


Today, Sylvia Jackson is a Navajo language instructor 2 in the small town of Holbrook, Arizona. She teaches Navajo to students at Holbrook High School. Her class is taught entirely 3 in Diné, the Navajo language.


Ms. Jackson said both she and her students have an important part in keeping their language alive.


“My parents are actually, they grew up speaking the Navajo language; they’re fluent speakers. They’re like a dictionary. If I ask them, “How do you say this?” they translate. But me, I’m learning as I’m going.”


Navajo Nation


The town of Holbrook is an hour by car from the Navajo Nation. The 69,000-square-kilometer territory is the largest of the 326 Indian reservations in the United States. The Navajo Nation covers parts of four states in the American Southwest. It is about the same size as the country of Ireland.


During the 1800s, increasing numbers of European settlers in America moved west. In 1864, the federal government began a campaign to deport 4 Navajos from their lands. The natives were moved to the northwest in a series of marches called the "Long Walk." The marches took place under the threat of death.


Navajo leaders and the U.S. government reached a peace treaty in 1868. It established the Navajo Indian Reservation.


Today, more than 250,000 people live in the Navajo Nation. They have their own laws, fly their own flag, and elect their own president.


The 2010 United States Census 5 showed that about 170,000 Navajos speak Navajo at home. It is one of the most robust 6 Native American languages today.


A right to speak Navajo


But there is a growing worry that the Navajo language could disappear. Seventy years ago, nearly everyone on the Navajo reservation spoke 7 Navajo as their first language. But today, few young Navajos can speak the language of their grandparents.


A study in 1998 found that only 30 percent of Navajos entering school spoke Navajo as their mother tongue. Just 30 years earlier, that was true of 90 percent of first-grade Navajo students.


Richard Epstein is a linguist 8 and professor at Rutgers University in Camden, New Jersey 9. He said a language’s survival depends on one generation passing down knowledge to the next generation.


“In order to keep a language alive, the adults of the community have to be able to transmit it to the young folks.”


Dr. Epstein calls teaching and transmitting your native language to your children a right that should be better protected.


“Everybody should have the right to speak their own language, just as much as they should have the right to practice their religion. Because their language is as good as everybody else’s language…So if you take that away, you’ve taken away a massive resource for knowing something about a part of human life.


"And you’ve taken away a part of who those people are. Is that right? Everybody should have the right to speak their language and to transmit their language to their children and to keep their culture alive.”


On the reservation itself, Navajo language instruction in schools starts at a young age. At Indian Wells Elementary School, 3rd graders are learning how to read, write, and speak Navajo. The school opened in 2001.


Dr. Robbie Koerperich was Indian Wells’ first principal. Now, he is the superintendent 10 of the Holbrook Unified 11 School District. He said his district is concerned with preserving the Navajo language.


“The Navajo language itself, I believe, is a major concern on the reservation and in our district, pertaining 12 to the preservation 13 of the language. So the preservation of the Navajo language is part of our mission.”


Hortensia is a third-grader at Indian Wells Elementary. She said Navajo language is her favorite class.


“So we could learn it and teach it to other people.”


The role of older generations


Hortensia said she often visits her grandmother, or naali in Navajo. Grandparents on the reservation play an important part in passing down both the language and culture to their grandchildren.


Morgan is a Navajo language student at Holbrook High School. She is one of Sylvia Jackson’s students. She visits her grandparents’ home with her cousins, nieces and nephews. She said she sometimes feels like an outcast.


“With my nieces and nephews and my cousins, they’re about my age or a bit older and they don’t speak Navajo. And so it’s a bit hard when we go out to my grandparents’ place and they try to talk to us. And it feels like — when my grandparents and my parents talk together — I feel like, kind of like an outcast, like I don’t know what they’re saying, but it's like, I want to learn the language so I can carry it on and then teach my kids. And so we won’t lose the language.”


Some of these students’ grandparents and great-grandparents may also have played an important part in U.S. history. During World War II, the U.S. military recruited Navajo speakers. Together, they developed a code to send secret information past Japanese and German code-breakers.


The code was never broken.


Dr. Epstein credits the Navajo language’s complex structure for it being such a successful code.


“It was so unbelievably complicated that the enemy couldn’t figure out how it worked. And yet we took the children of these people away from their families to train them to speak English only on the grounds that this language was inferior.”


Sylvia Jackson was once one of those children. Today, she finds herself at the forefront of keeping her language alive.


“If you just think about it, my parents, if they go, then that’s going to be me right there who has to carry that on. If I don’t have the knowledge that they had, that’s going to be it right there. So, I’m glad that we have students who want to learn the language, who want to keep that language.”


Words in This Story


promote - v. to help (something) happen, develop, or increase


robust - adj. strong and healthy


transmit - v. to give or pass (information, values, etc.) from one person to another


folks - n. people in general


principal - n. the person in charge of a public school


outcast - n. someone who is not accepted by other people


code - n. a set of letters, numbers, symbols, etc., that is used to secretly send messages to someone


inferior - adj. of little or less importance or value


forefront - n. the most important part or position



adj.部族的,种族的
  • He became skilled in several tribal lingoes.他精通几种部族的语言。
  • The country was torn apart by fierce tribal hostilities.那个国家被部落间的激烈冲突弄得四分五裂。
n.指导者,教员,教练
  • The college jumped him from instructor to full professor.大学突然把他从讲师提升为正教授。
  • The skiing instructor was a tall,sunburnt man.滑雪教练是一个高高个子晒得黑黑的男子。
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地
  • The fire was entirely caused by their neglect of duty. 那场火灾完全是由于他们失职而引起的。
  • His life was entirely given up to the educational work. 他的一生统统献给了教育工作。
vt.驱逐出境
  • We deport aliens who slip across our borders.我们把偷渡入境的外国人驱逐出境。
  • More than 240 England football fans are being deported from Italy following riots last night.昨晚的骚乱发生后有240多名英格兰球迷被驱逐出意大利。
n.(官方的)人口调查,人口普查
  • A census of population is taken every ten years.人口普查每10年进行一次。
  • The census is taken one time every four years in our country.我国每四年一次人口普查。
adj.强壮的,强健的,粗野的,需要体力的,浓的
  • She is too tall and robust.她个子太高,身体太壮。
  • China wants to keep growth robust to reduce poverty and avoid job losses,AP commented.美联社评论道,中国希望保持经济强势增长,以减少贫困和失业状况。
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说
  • They sourced the spoke nuts from our company.他们的轮辐螺帽是从我们公司获得的。
  • The spokes of a wheel are the bars that connect the outer ring to the centre.辐条是轮子上连接外圈与中心的条棒。
n.语言学家;精通数种外国语言者
  • I used to be a linguist till I become a writer.过去我是个语言学家,后来成了作家。
  • Professor Cui has a high reputation as a linguist.崔教授作为语言学家名声很高。
n.运动衫
  • He wears a cotton jersey when he plays football.他穿运动衫踢足球。
  • They were dressed alike in blue jersey and knickers.他们穿着一致,都是蓝色的运动衫和灯笼短裤。
n.监督人,主管,总监;(英国)警务长
  • He was soon promoted to the post of superintendent of Foreign Trade.他很快就被擢升为对外贸易总监。
  • He decided to call the superintendent of the building.他决定给楼房管理员打电话。
(unify 的过去式和过去分词); 统一的; 统一标准的; 一元化的
  • The teacher unified the answer of her pupil with hers. 老师核对了学生的答案。
  • The First Emperor of Qin unified China in 221 B.C. 秦始皇于公元前221年统一中国。
与…有关系的,附属…的,为…固有的(to)
  • Living conditions are vastly different from those pertaining in their country of origin. 生活条件与他们祖国大不相同。
  • The inspector was interested in everything pertaining to the school. 视察员对有关学校的一切都感兴趣。
n.保护,维护,保存,保留,保持
  • The police are responsible for the preservation of law and order.警察负责维持法律与秩序。
  • The picture is in an excellent state of preservation.这幅画保存得极为完好。
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