Texarkana Gazette

Virus leads tribes to protect elders as links to identity

- CHRISTINE FERNANDO Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Felicia Fonseca of The Associated Press.

Tribes across the nation are working to protect elder members who serve as honored links to customs passed from one generation to the next.

The efforts to deliver protective gear, meals and vaccines are about more than saving lives. Tribal elders often possess unique knowledge of language and history that is all the more valuable because tribes commonly pas s down their traditions orally. That means losing elders to the virus could wipe out irreplacea­ble pieces of culture.

“When you lose an elder, you lose a part of yourself,” said Monica Harvey, a Navajo woman who lives in Leupp, Ariz., east of Flagstaff. “You lose a connection to history, our stories, our culture, our traditions.”

Harvey remembers her own grandfathe­r explaining the stories behind Navajo songs and teaching her Navajo words from the songs. She often listened to her grandparen­ts speaking Navajo while she practiced the words under her breath.

In Oklahoma, the Cherokee Nation has increased food distributi­ons to elders and offered financial aid to those struggling to pay rent or utilities. Concern for elders is also apparent in the tribe’s covid-19 vaccine-distributi­on plans. Participan­ts and workers in the tribe’s elder program are first in line for the shots, along with hospital workers and first responders. Next are those whose first language is Cherokee and others considered “tribal treasures,” an honor given to members who keep Cherokee art, language and other culture alive through their work.

An effort among the Blackfeet in Montana is helping the tribe’s 600-plus members connect with elders who need support. Connecticu­t’s Mashantuck­et Pequot Nation is providing its citizens with masks and telemedici­ne, delivering meals to their doors and organizing home visits to give flu vaccines.

“Elders are like libraries. Losing one is like a library burning down,” said Loren Racine, creator of a Facebook page offering help in the Blackfeet community.

Roy Boney Jr., who manages a Cherokee language program, said the vast majority of Cherokee speakers are elders. They make up a small pool of people the program relies on to teach the language he calls the “beating heart” of Cherokee identity.

“For decades our language has been taken from us through forced assimilati­on,” Boney said. “Elders hold our history and culture but also our language. … Our elders are precious.”

Almost half of the Cherokee who received care from the tribe’s health services but died from the coronaviru­s were fluent Cherokee speakers. Losing even a handful of speakers can be devastatin­g for language preservati­on and other cultural practices, Boney said.

“With them goes so much informatio­n in terms of language knowledge, dialect, specialize­d knowledge of medicine and traditiona­l practices,” he said. “All these things we’re trying to revitalize and save, they’re the heart of all of it.”

Mashantuck­et Pequot elders shifted to a virtual format for the intergener­ational gatherings where they tell traditiona­l stories. An elders council also helps to organize Pequot language bingo nights and Schemitzun, the annual Festival of the Green Corn.

“When we heard how covid-19 was spreading, we were immediatel­y concerned for our elders and how losing them would affect the tribe, so we immediatel­y started working to protect them,” said the tribe’s chief medical officer, Setu Vora.

The tribe has no known covid-19 deaths.

Pequot elders play an important role in the effort to revive the tribe’s language, which is no longer widely spoken. Elders still remember relatives who spoke the language and can verify the definition­s and context of certain words. A handful of the tribe’s 2,000 members are becoming somewhat proficient in Pequot as they research and reclaim new words, Vora said.

Karen Ketcher was among 28 Cherokee Nation elders who have died from the coronaviru­s. She was weeks shy of her 71st birthday and had decades of experience working for the tribe and the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Her knowledge was unmatched and invaluable, said her granddaugh­ter, Taryn King.

“There’s so much at stake when this virus hits our communitie­s,” said King, 31, of Stilwell, Okla. She described elders as “the glue that holds our communitie­s together.”

At work, Ketcher was affectiona­tely called “Granny.” She was the go-to person for questions about Cherokee policies, tribal governance and how to apply for grants. She also was the first stop for snacks, help mending holes in sweaters or questions about community relations.

Tribal elders often possess unique knowledge of language and history that is all the more valuable because tribes commonly pass down their traditions orally. That means losing elders to the virus could wipe out irreplacea­ble pieces of culture.

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