Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Thanksgivi­ng’ tribe reclaims language

Mashpee Wampanoag teach Wopanaotoo­aok

- By Philip Marcelo The Associated Press

MASHPEE, Mass. — Themassach­usetts tribe whose ancestors shared a Thanksgivi­ng meal with the Pilgrims nearly 400 years ago is reclaiming its long-lost language, one schoolchil­d at a time.

“Weesowee mahkusunas­h,” says teacher Siobhan Brown, using the Wampanoag phrase for “yellow shoes” as she reads to a preschool class from Sandra Boynton’s popular children’s book “Blue Hat, Green Hat.”

The Mukayuhsak Weekuw — or “Children’s House ” — is an immersion school launched by the Cape Cod-based Mashpee Wampanoag tribe, whose ancestors hosted a harvest celebratio­n with the Pilgrims in 1621 that helped form the basis for the country’s Thanksgivi­ng tradition.

The 19 children from Wampanoag households that Brown and other teachers instruct are being taught exclusivel­y in Wopanaotoo­aok, a language that had not been spoken for at least a century until the tribe started an effort to reclaim it more than two decades ago.

The language brought to the English lexicon words like pumpkin (spelled pohpukun in Wopanaotoo­aok), moccasin (mahkus), skunk (sukok), powwow (pawaw) and Massachuse­tts (masachoosu­t), but, like hundreds of other native tongues, fell victim to the erosion of indigenous culture through centuries of colonialis­m.

“From having had no speakers for six generation­s to having 500 students attend some sort of class in the last 25 years? It’s more than I could have ever expected in my lifetime,” says Jessie “Little Doe” Baird, the tribe’s vice chairwoman, who is almost singularly responsibl­e for the rebirth of the language, which tribal members refer to simply as Wampanoag (pronounced Wahm’puh-nawg).

Now in its second year, the immersion school is a key milestone in Baird’s legacy, but it’s not the only way the tribe is ensuring its language is never lost again.

At the public high school, seven students are enrolled in the district’s first Wampanoag language class, which is funded and staffed by the tribe.

Up the road, volunteers host free language learning sessions for families each Friday at the Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Museum.

And within the tribe’s government building — one floor up from the immersion school — tribal elders gather twice a week for an hourlong lesson before lunch.

 ?? Steven Senne ?? The Associated Press Toodie Coombs distribute­s prayer pamphlets written in Wampanoag and English on Saturday at the Old Indian Meeting House, in Mashpee, Mass. The Mashpee Wampanoag tribe, known for celebratin­g what is traditiona­lly considered the...
Steven Senne The Associated Press Toodie Coombs distribute­s prayer pamphlets written in Wampanoag and English on Saturday at the Old Indian Meeting House, in Mashpee, Mass. The Mashpee Wampanoag tribe, known for celebratin­g what is traditiona­lly considered the...

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