Blackfoot youth learn language through rap - Action News
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Blackfoot youth learn language through rap

With only 3,500 speakers alive today, the Blackfoot language is facing extinction unless it's passed down to the younger generations. Enter rap music.

Camp encourages First Nations to connect to their culture

Rapping in Blackfoot

9 years ago
Duration 2:48
Ten Blackfoot students from the Calgary area participated in a brand new workshop this week: learning their native language by rapping. The activity was organized by associate professor Darin Flynn of the linguistic department at U of C. With the help of Karim Rushdy from The Rap Camp organization, they created their own songs in Blackfoot. Video Producer Evelyne Asselin visited them on their last day. Meet Darin Flynn, participant Shanell White-Quills and Rap Camp assistant Big Zee.

With only 3,500 speakers alive today, the Blackfoot language is facing extinction unless it's passed down to the younger generations.

Enter rap music.

"One of the elders I work with, Sandra Manyfeathers, said 'You know, it's nice all this work we do together on the elder speech,' but she's worried about the language not being carried on by the young people.So she had this idea that we could do language camps for the kids," said University of Calgary linguistics professor Darin Flynn.

"Because I like rap, I had this idea of getting Blackfoot into rap music."

Lyrical education

The result is a weeklong camp thatintroduces local First Nationsyouth to their traditional language, culminating in a song performed entirely in Blackfoot.

"They were a little bit intimidated at the beginning, so we started with English and then on the next day we introduced words that they actually knew;that they forgot that they knew," said Flynn.

"Now at the end is where they're most intimidated because we're doing all Blackfoot lines, so that's pretty hard for them."

KarimRushdy with The Rap Camp, an organization that teaches hip hop to youth and is running the camp,says the Blackfoot language is ideally suited for the medium.

"I actually think it's better than English for rapping, it's built with so much rhythm in it," he said, adding he's never worked with a First Nations language before.

Relevant learning

Shanelle White-Quills, a 13-year-old participant, came into the camp knowing only a couple of words in Blackfoot, but says she'll most likely continue learning after the experience.

"That's really what they're excited about is this idea that the Blackfoot gets passed onto the next generation, that it doesn't stay with the elders, that it's used by the younger people," said Flynn, reflectingon the reaction of the elders after hearing some initial tapes.

"And if the young people are using it in a medium that they like, there's more chance of them grabbing it and taking it with them."