CHEROKEE LANGUAGE RESOURCES: Check out our “Let’s Talk Cherokee” language lessons to learn words, phrases and how to converse in the Cherokee language at: th-cam.com/play/PLl3bXGWUX-W98fESIf-YnWfjCa7by3DB1.html&si=nwjUEgTX_4W4p0wu language.cherokee.org has a variety of wonderful free resources, including online classes! Subscribe to Visit Cherokee Nation (youtube.com/@VisitCherokeeNation?si=Kap4G1qXxcoElJl) and Cherokee Nation’s (youtube.com/@cherokeenation?si=AvuEkReFXUjaok4w) channels for other language content.
@@violetlight007 OsiyoTV is a part of The Cherokee Nation, whose reservation is located in northeastern Oklahoma. However, our docuseries features the personal stories of Cherokees all over the world, including our relatives in the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in North Carolina.
The Eastern Band is where my family is from. I never learned it. My grandmother and great-grandmother spoke Cherokee. My father did some but not a lot. So we didn't learn it. I think its great. I do think you need to go ahead and make them bilingual however. Include English in there because it'll make it harder to integrate into schools. Most teachers, even Cherokee teachers do not speak the language. What you're doing is amazing.
I am learning Cherokee through the online program - I'm a harper, and in the mid 90s leared a couple of songs in Scots Gaelic. I find the word order and world view very similar in the Gaelic and tsalagi!
Sat here with a smile and tears. What a beautiful thing to have created to keep your heritage alive. I wish I had access to learn my fathers native language. St. Lucian Patios speakers are hard to come across but this has inspired me. I wish you all the best Little Cherokee Seeds 💜💜💜
This is a wonderful program. I hope you will be able to teach to at least 7 years old. Spanish was my first language but I stopped (moved) at 5. Now I can only speak Spanish like a 5-year old. Most of it is gone. If you can make sure a parent learns it and continues to use it with the child that would be great.
Not only the language but the historical trauma ALL native nations have faced throughout history needs to be told and acknowledged and taught in schools. 😢
More and more this is being taught in schools and it needs to keep being taught more!!. I remember have several units in elementary, middle, and high school learning about this. When I was young I thought all Indigenous people were dead and that they had all been killed off. This was back in 2006. They taught us so much of the atrocities I literally thought we had no natives left. So it is being taught, and I’m sure even more since 2006
I so agree!! The gradeschool 4 of my grands attended (Oregon) recently changed it's name from 'Columbus' to Willamette - the old name of a local river and used by our Kalapuia !
I’m an east European who stumbled upon this. Don’t know how, but this is so lovely to see. Wonderful to see efforts to preserve the language. Best of luck to all of these people 🤝
This is honestly amazing! I feel as if native languages in the states should be recognized as official languages since they are the ancestral toungues of the land Wishing all these kiddos luck, may the language live on
Thanks American Indian Resource Center: Wathene Young and Pam Iron (and staff) for bringing this program to life and having the vision to bring Camp SevenStar to life.
I wanna take the class how would i do that because ive bwen teaching myself for my daughter but the unega hate that im doing it for my baby girl but idl its kept me calm
And ppl view me a poor very resourceful person as trash for my views on wanting her too reach the highest level of tribal knowledge before we unite and balance the power and care for the tribes the female warrior she will be a selfless leader if im just given the chance to lead her like a father should lead her
@@comicriddle4424 I love studying languages so I try not to talk to my daughter in English ever just in general. Her dad is Puerto Rican and Dominican so I speak to her in as much Cherokee and Spanish as I can. But when I was a rebellious little teenybopper I refused studying any of my indigenous languages (both my parents are from different tribes) and I focused on Korean and Mandarin Chinese so my daughter hears that every now and again as well 🥲. I take Armenian classes so I use Armenian vocabulary with her at times and Taino dictionary too. Only people who question my process are unega. 🤷🏻♀️ My daughter learns Osage, Hokna, Sawono,and anishinaabemowin as well. I grew up in MO on Osage territory, my dad is Hokna and my mom is Metis and Cherokee.
So much respect and appreciation for this program and all involved. I wish more Cherokee had been spoken when I was a child. I picked up a few things but sadly not near enough.
This is great! My great-grandmother was a fluent Cherokee speaker, but she didn't pass it on to her kids, so I never had a chance to learn. The Nisenan in Northern California are bringing back their language through the kids as well.
I don't know if my grandmother Minnie (born in Oregon of Cherokee descent) spoke the language at all. I'm enrolled in the second term of the online classes, with first language speker Ed Fields and love it so much! Each class, I understand a bit more.
This is such a fantastic and important project! It truly does take a village, not just to raise a child but also to save, keep and cultivate a language, its history and culture for future generations. All the best to you in your endeavour ❤
My great grandfather is hop turkey. I do not know his name in Cherokee or how to pronounce it. I have been watching this channel trying to learn ancestor language but i had brain surgery in 2012 & was only taught English when retaught to talk, drink, eat, walk short distances. Even now i still have trouble with words but i so much want to know my grandfathers life. My dad was born in Minko Grady Oklahoma. Sadly grandparents divorced. Grandma raised him with a white man & that meant not knowing grandpas side of the family. I can only hope that the seed grows now planted.
Osiyo What a wonderful program! I'm in the second term of Ed Field's online tsalagi classes, and love them so much! Tsalagi aquadeloquasdi aqhaduliha (I wanted to learn Cherokee) for a long time - and am taking my own osdi (baby) steps. I'm in Oregon, and at the end of the month will take part in a two day immersion dideloquasdi (school/ learning) with two native speakers and folks from this area - I'm excited and nevous! Wado
Speak in Cherokee with subtitles. I think you need also written the cherokee in romance like pinyin in Mandarin because cherokee Is very difficult to read and easy to pronounce.
@@OsiyoTV Oh Thank You So Very Much!! Yes I Am Familiar with This Area! That's the Area I was born in, well, Me if there, Y'all Stay Safe and Take Good Care!! As well as All those precious baby Cherokee's!!
CHEROKEE LANGUAGE RESOURCES:
Check out our “Let’s Talk Cherokee” language lessons to learn words, phrases and how to converse in the Cherokee language at: th-cam.com/play/PLl3bXGWUX-W98fESIf-YnWfjCa7by3DB1.html&si=nwjUEgTX_4W4p0wu
language.cherokee.org has a variety of wonderful free resources, including online classes!
Subscribe to Visit Cherokee Nation (youtube.com/@VisitCherokeeNation?si=Kap4G1qXxcoElJl) and Cherokee Nation’s (youtube.com/@cherokeenation?si=AvuEkReFXUjaok4w) channels for other language content.
Is this in Oklahoma or North Carolina?
@@violetlight007 OsiyoTV is a part of The Cherokee Nation, whose reservation is located in northeastern Oklahoma. However, our docuseries features the personal stories of Cherokees all over the world, including our relatives in the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians in North Carolina.
This is beautiful. I hope other nations can do something similar. ❤
❤️
The Eastern Band is where my family is from. I never learned it. My grandmother and great-grandmother spoke Cherokee. My father did some but not a lot. So we didn't learn it. I think its great. I do think you need to go ahead and make them bilingual however. Include English in there because it'll make it harder to integrate into schools. Most teachers, even Cherokee teachers do not speak the language. What you're doing is amazing.
Best of luck to you! I'm of the gaelic persuasion and I'm worried about the loss of that language too. Keep your culture going.❤️
I am learning Cherokee through the online program - I'm a harper, and in the mid 90s leared a couple of songs in Scots Gaelic. I find the word order and world view very similar in the Gaelic and tsalagi!
Tá mé ag foghlaim Gaeilge. Is as Washington State mé. Gaeilge abu!
I so appreciate these language heroes efforts to save Cherokee.
Sat here with a smile and tears. What a beautiful thing to have created to keep your heritage alive. I wish I had access to learn my fathers native language. St. Lucian Patios speakers are hard to come across but this has inspired me.
I wish you all the best Little Cherokee Seeds 💜💜💜
This is a wonderful program. I hope you will be able to teach to at least 7 years old. Spanish was my first language but I stopped (moved) at 5. Now I can only speak Spanish like a 5-year old. Most of it is gone. If you can make sure a parent learns it and continues to use it with the child that would be great.
Always be proud of your heritage best wishes from Scotland🤝
Not only the language but the historical trauma ALL native nations have faced throughout history needs to be told and acknowledged and taught in schools. 😢
More and more this is being taught in schools and it needs to keep being taught more!!. I remember have several units in elementary, middle, and high school learning about this. When I was young I thought all Indigenous people were dead and that they had all been killed off. This was back in 2006. They taught us so much of the atrocities I literally thought we had no natives left. So it is being taught, and I’m sure even more since 2006
I so agree!! The gradeschool 4 of my grands attended (Oregon) recently changed it's name from 'Columbus' to Willamette - the old name of a local river and used by our Kalapuia !
I’m an east European who stumbled upon this. Don’t know how, but this is so lovely to see. Wonderful to see efforts to preserve the language. Best of luck to all of these people 🤝
This is honestly amazing! I feel as if native languages in the states should be recognized as official languages since they are the ancestral toungues of the land
Wishing all these kiddos luck, may the language live on
Thanks American Indian Resource Center: Wathene Young and Pam Iron (and staff) for bringing this program to life and having the vision to bring Camp SevenStar to life.
I do my best to speak to my daughter in Cherokee. Let's talk Cherokee and the word list help a lot. My cousin took the classes
I wanna take the class how would i do that because ive bwen teaching myself for my daughter but the unega hate that im doing it for my baby girl but idl its kept me calm
And ppl view me a poor very resourceful person as trash for my views on wanting her too reach the highest level of tribal knowledge before we unite and balance the power and care for the tribes the female warrior she will be a selfless leader if im just given the chance to lead her like a father should lead her
@@comicriddle4424 Cherokee nations website (western band) has a link to free language classes.
@@comicriddle4424 I love studying languages so I try not to talk to my daughter in English ever just in general. Her dad is Puerto Rican and Dominican so I speak to her in as much Cherokee and Spanish as I can. But when I was a rebellious little teenybopper I refused studying any of my indigenous languages (both my parents are from different tribes) and I focused on Korean and Mandarin Chinese so my daughter hears that every now and again as well 🥲. I take Armenian classes so I use Armenian vocabulary with her at times and Taino dictionary too. Only people who question my process are unega. 🤷🏻♀️ My daughter learns Osage, Hokna, Sawono,and anishinaabemowin as well. I grew up in MO on Osage territory, my dad is Hokna and my mom is Metis and Cherokee.
So much respect and appreciation for this program and all involved. I wish more Cherokee had been spoken when I was a child. I picked up a few things but sadly not near enough.
This is great! My great-grandmother was a fluent Cherokee speaker, but she didn't pass it on to her kids, so I never had a chance to learn. The Nisenan in Northern California are bringing back their language through the kids as well.
I don't know if my grandmother Minnie (born in Oregon of Cherokee descent) spoke the language at all. I'm enrolled in the second term of the online classes, with first language speker Ed Fields and love it so much! Each class, I understand a bit more.
This is such a fantastic and important project! It truly does take a village, not just to raise a child but also to save, keep and cultivate a language, its history and culture for future generations.
All the best to you in your endeavour ❤
What a wonderful program
My great grandfather is hop turkey. I do not know his name in Cherokee or how to pronounce it. I have been watching this channel trying to learn ancestor language but i had brain surgery in 2012 & was only taught English when retaught to talk, drink, eat, walk short distances. Even now i still have trouble with words but i so much want to know my grandfathers life. My dad was born in Minko Grady Oklahoma. Sadly grandparents divorced. Grandma raised him with a white man & that meant not knowing grandpas side of the family. I can only hope that the seed grows now planted.
This is so beautiful that I can't stop crying!
This is awesome, I love that they are helping preserve our heritage. 🙏🏻
Osiyo What a wonderful program! I'm in the second term of Ed Field's online tsalagi classes, and love them so much!
Tsalagi aquadeloquasdi aqhaduliha (I wanted to learn Cherokee) for a long time - and am taking my own osdi (baby) steps. I'm in Oregon, and at the end of the month will take part in a two day immersion dideloquasdi (school/ learning) with two native speakers and folks from this area - I'm excited and nevous!
Wado
Good evening from Copperhill Tn.
That was so inspiring! Wado!
❤beautiful what they are doing
So dope
This is so heartwarming ❤
That's what Norman Fowler taught me to keep the history of all of are people.
You need to make movies and series in Cherokee to create an interest to learn Cherokee or an other native language.
Love This!
Doyu equa adanvtedi!
❤️❤️
🌹
Much love
❤❤❤
How wonderful! I have always been fascinated by native Americans. Keep up the good work!! Lots of love from Oslo, Norway
Speak in Cherokee with subtitles. I think you need also written the cherokee in romance like pinyin in Mandarin because cherokee Is very difficult to read and easy to pronounce.
Sorry i just checked my email and that's wild im not gonna lie i didn't think id ever find someone like me
💚💚
Looks like Oklahoma
The Little Cherokee Seeds program is located in Tahlequah, Oklahoma - the capital of the Cherokee Nation Reservation.
@@OsiyoTV Oh Thank You So Very Much!! Yes I Am Familiar with This Area! That's the Area I was born in, well, Me if there, Y'all Stay Safe and Take Good Care!! As well as All those precious baby Cherokee's!!