LANGUAGE REVITALIZATION POLE – Raise and Installation Ceremony
Raise and installation Ceremony of Language Revitalization Pole
                        About This Project
                        
                        First Nations Education Foundation, in recognition
                        
                        of the importance of Indigenous language and
                        
                        culture and the 2019 UN International Year of
                        
                        Indigenous Languages, has commissioned a
                        
                        Language Revitalization totem pole from renowned
                        
                        Nuu-chah-nulth carver, Tim Paul.
                      
                        FNEF collaborates with First Nations governments to
                        
                        develop language revitalization programs for at-risk
                        
                        Indigenous dialects using contemporary educational
                        
                        practices and innovative, interactive technology.
                        
                        With a language revitalization pilot project already
                        
                        underway in partnership with the Yuułu?ił?ath First
                        
                        Nation, FNEF wants to raise awareness about the
                        
                        state of Aboriginal languages in North America.
                        
                        British Columbia will serve as a fitting home for the
                        
                        Language Revitalization Pole as within its borders
                        
                        exist 34 Indigenous languages, making up over two
                        
                        thirds of the Indigenous languages spoken in
                        
                        Canada.
                      
                        “Oral history, songs, dances, ceremony, and art
                        were
                        
                        and continue to be the vehicle for transmitting history,
                        
                        knowledge and sovereign rights from generation to
                        
                        generation. Through storytelling we are also reminded
                        
                        of our family ties to neighbouring tribes and
                        Nations,”
                        
                        says Nuu-chah-nulth artist Tim Paul.
                      
                        The stories and themes featured on the pole have
                        
                        been chosen by the master carver. They honour ten
                        
                        relatives of the Nuu-chah-nulth people: sky, sun,
                        
                        moon, mountains, rivers, lakes, land, sea, wind and
                        
                        stars. There is also an eleventh relative,
                        
                        earthquake, which is sent to teach humility and
                        
                        remind human beings of the all-encompassing
                        
                        power of the Creator.
                      
                        “When we use our language,” Tim Paul
                        explains, “it is
                        
                        not just another way of saying something; the
                        
                        principles of our culture are embedded in the
                        
                        language and many words simply cannot be
                        
                        translated. It is only by understanding our language
                        
                        can we unlock the most important values, principles,
                        
                        and concepts of who we are.”
                      
                        Carving the Language Revitalization Pole will not only
                        
                        bring attention to the threats facing Indigenous
                        
                        languages, but will create content for the language
                        
                        pilot project underway in Yuułu?ił?ath community
                        
                        dialect. As carving begins, documentary cameras will
                        
                        follow the entire process – with footage to later be
                        
                        turned into Virtual Reality language lessons on the
                        
                        First Nations Education Foundation platform.
                      
                        About Filmmaker Dale Devost
                        
                        Dale Devost has been behind a camera for over 30
                        
                        years. His programs have been broadcast on CBC,
                        
                        APTN, and Knowledge Network and he has produced
                        
                        numerous documentaries including two projects that
                        
                        feature master carver Tim Paul: Dr. George Clutesi
                        
                        Curriculum Project and New Moon a Gift for the Spirit.
                        
                        Devost has been running his own production company
                        
                        out of his home on Hornby Island since 1985, with a
                        
                        focus on telling stories of cross-cultural
                        
                        understanding, arts, and the environment.
                      
                        For more information about the Pole and language
                        
                        revitalization please visit: www.fnef.ca
                      
