Revitalizing
Native languages
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by:
Jaimie
Park / Grant Writer / National Society for American Indian Elderly
Today many tribes
are faced with the possibility of forever losing their culture, customs and
language. It is a plight American Indians have been struggling with since contact
with Europeans. One Native woman is playing an active role in her community
to fight the extinction of her people’s ways and language. That woman is Jennifer
Sutherland.
Sutherland,
or Red Elk Woman, is a 22-year-old Gros Ventre/Ojibway enrolled member at the
Fort Belkap Reservation in Montana. She is a proud wife and mother of two children
and was also a student at the University of Montana-Missoula where she was the
president of the Kyi-Yo Native American Student Association. Sutherland attended
the University of Montana-Missoula for three years, majoring in Native American
Studies. Fortunately for the National Society for American Indian Elderly and
those elders she is currently helping, Sutherland took a break from academia
to be an Americorps*VISTA.
Sutherland
is one of the first outreach volunteers in the National Society for American
Indian Elderly’s VISTA Reservation Placement Project. NSAIE was established
in 1987 as a 501(c)(3) organization to improve the quality of life for on-reservation
American Indian elders. NSAIE supports a network of tribally established and
administered services to achieve its mission of improving access to and quality
of health care services. Quality of life improvements for the vulnerable population
of elders are provided through financial support, in the form of small grants,
to tribal senior centers for community health services such as nutrition, transportation,
socialization and in-home care.
NSAIE
is staffed entirely by volunteers who have committed their significant talents
toward developing a long-term, sustainable system for expanding senior services
on tribal lands. In October 2000, NSAIE received the first of several grants
from the Corporation for National and Community Service for Americorps*VISTA
volunteers to assist with resource development. Since October 2000, NSAIE has
received 12 Americorps*VISTA volunteers, who have been placed on various reservations
of its member tribes to work directly with tribal elders, as well as conduct
resource development for the organization. In the past 11 months the VISTAs
have generated over $179,000 in cash and more than $42,000 in donated goods
and services to support the Native American senior centers they are working
with.
As
a VISTA, Sutherland is hoping to revive the culture of the Turtle Mountain Band
of Chippewa located in the Trenton Indian Service Area. Her duties include grant
writing, volunteer recruitment, and program development. Two projects Sutherland
is currently working on are the construction of an assisted living facility
in Trenton, as well as a language immersion camp to be held this summer. It
is the revival of the Mitchif language that Sutherland hopes to accomplish on
the TISA. Only a few elders are fluent in Mitchif and are located on the Turtle
Mountain Reservation. At the week-long language immersion camp Sutherland will
also be teaching beading and dancing, jigging and drum making.
Cultural
preservation and revitalization are only a few of Sutherland’s goals to accomplish
as a VISTA and as an American Indian. Currently, Sutherland is working with
the University of North Dakota-Grand Forks on gathering data for a behavioral
risk factor survey. The information gathered from this survey will help set
up a program to assist people who are chronically ill, frail, or disabled maintain
their independence, be able to stay in their homes and communities for as long
as possible.
When
asked what her motivation was for joining Americorps*VISTA and working with
NSAIE, Sutherland said, "I want to help my people however I can. I
think that’s why I’m here today working for our elders. They’re the key to our
culture surviving, and have taught me so much. It’s only right that I do what
I can to better their lives."
Sutherland
also recommends participation in the program to fellow Natives. Upon completion
of one year of service, VISTAs receive an education stipend of $4,725 to be
applied toward tuition or previous student loans. Sutherland plans on utilizing
this education award to complete her degree in Native American Studies.
Jaimie
Park is the grant writer for National Society for American Indian Elderly. She
is currently working with the Sault Ste. Marie Chippewa in Michigan.
Source: indiancountry.com online Native newspaper
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