How this mentorship program is helping Kanien'kha speakers learn from elders - Action News
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Indigenous

How this mentorship program is helping Kanien'kha speakers learn from elders

Brandyce Tewateronhiakhwa Barnes jumped at the opportunity to participate in a new 10-week mentorship program designed for advanced learners to be mentored by elders.

'Every time we lose a speaker, we lose all their knowledge,' says participant

Brandyce Tewateronhiakhwa Barnes, right, is being mentored by Elder Onw:ri Grace Goodleaf as a part of a 10-week language and culture mentorship program. (Kanhehs:io Deer/CBC)

For the last two months, Brandyce Tewateronhiakhwa Barnes has spent a lot of time visiting an elder in her community to practise speaking her language.

"Every time we lose a speaker, we lose all their knowledge," said Barnes, who is from Kahnawake, south of Montreal.

"If we aren't taking advantage of it while they're there, we're going to lose everything."

Barnes, 40, graduated from the Kanien'keh:ka Onkwawn:na Raotitihkwa Language and Cultural Center's two-year Ratiwennahn:rats adult immersion program three years ago to learn Kanien'kha, or the Mohawk language.

As a way to actively be around the language, she decided to work in Kahnawake's immersion schools immediately but still felt a need to grow her proficiency. That'swhy she jumped at the chance to participate ina10-week pilot mentorship program designed for advanced learners to be mentored by elders.

Pilot program to build fluency

The program was developed by the Kahnawake Collective Impact's Language and Culture Mentorship Action Team, which brings togethercommunity organizations to work collaboratively to promote language and culture.

Ohontsakhte Montour is the co-chair of the Kahnawake Collective Impacts Language and Culture Mentorship Action Team and a cultural development officer at the Kanienkeh:ka Onkwawn:na Raotitihkwa Language and Cultural Center. (Submitted by Ohontsakhte Montour)

"It's something that's missing in the community," said Ohontsakhte Montour, co-chair of the action team.

"In the community right now, there aren't a lot of existing programs for advanced language speakers."

Montour said the goal is to expand the mentorship program to six months, and offer it immediately after a class of students graduate from Ratiwennahn:rats sothat they don't regress in their language capacity.

The first cohort has three pairs of participants. Each of their sessions are recorded, which will be added to the cultural centre's archive. Barnes's mentor is 82-year-old Onw:ri Grace Goodleaf.

Passing on knowledge

A survivor of the Indian day school system in Kahnawake, Goodleaf attended Kateri School when children were punished for speaking Kanien'kha.

She spent 37 years teaching in a Kanien'kha immersion school until retiring at the age of 80. She said it was important to participate as a mentor with the program because there's still a need to pass on language knowledge.

"My time here may be short," she said.

"I would like to pass on what I learned through my life to someone else and just not let it die."

For Barnes, the program helps balance the pressure to learnas much as possible without feeling like a burden on elders who provide their time and knowledge. Both the elders and mentees are compensated for their time.

"They deserve it," said Barnes.

"They deserve so much for hanging on to something that was ripped away from us."