Indigenous translators vital to language revitalization, access to services, say advocates - Action News
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Manitoba

Indigenous translators vital to language revitalization, access to services, say advocates

The role of language translators has changed over the years, but they're still vital to our communities, says a woman who has worked as an Ojibway interpreter since she was eight.

Province of Manitoba recently announced funding to train 35 Indigenous language translators over 3 years

Patricia Ningewance says that training new generations to become proficient speakers and translators of Indigenous languages is important to language preservation. (Albert Leung/CBC)

The role of Indigenous language translators has changed over the years, but they're still vital to our communities, says a woman who has worked as an interpreter for decades.

Patricia Ningewance, now 70 years old, began translating for Ojibway-language speakers when she was eight. She would work as an interpreter in hospitals, translating for patients who could only speak Ojibway.

In the 1970s, many people in Indigenous communitieswere translating, she said. That was especially important as manyelders at the time did not speak English.

"We were the ones that had to interpret the world for them. That's what we did," said Ningewance, who is originally from Lac Seul First Nation in northwestern Ontario and now livesin Winnipeg, where she teaches at the University of Manitoba.

The province of Manitoba says it's nowhoping to increase the number of Indigenous-language translators in the province. Itrecently announced $300,000 in funding to train 45 speakers and 35 translators over the next three yearsin theDakota, Michif, Creeand Ojibway languages.

The partnership with Indigenous Languages of Manitoba Inc. is intended to strengthen the survival of Indigenous languages, the province said in a news release earlier this month.

"Indigenouslanguages are vital to the survival of the culture and identity ofIndigenouspeoples," said Indigenous Reconciliation and Northern Relations Minister Alan Lagimodierein the release.

Ningewance also says that training the new generations to become proficient speakers and translators is important to language preservation.

Her own role as an interpreterhas shifted over the years, she says. Now, because there are fewer and fewer monolingual elders, demand for that type of translation work has diminished.

But the need fortranslators who can help preserve language skills among new learners is still strong,she said.

"I think our new leadership will be the people who are learning the language now.The young people who are becoming parents, and people who are wanting to be the next generation of speakers."

The 2016 federal census the latest for which language data is currently available foundevidence that more people are learning Indigenous languages as an additional language, according to Statistics Canada. But it also points to the need to train fluent speakers.

That census found that in 2016, 15.6 per cent of the Indigenous population said they couldconduct a conversation in an Indigenouslanguage a drop from21.4 per centin 2006.

However, the number of people who said theycould speak an Indigenouslanguage increased over that period by 3.1 per cent, suggesting that there were more people who were not native speakers, but were learning those languages as an additional language.

Cameron Adams is the creator of nhinawwin, a Swampy Cree language app. (Submitted by University of Winnipeg)

Cameron Adams, who createda Swampy Cree language app,says translators are essential not just to language revitalization, but also to ensuringaccess to services.

Adams, who is not a fluent Swampy Cree speaker himself, says he's seen situations where interpretershave been valuable.

"What if somebody calls 911 and they only speak Cree? You want to make sure your translatorscan convey that message so that everyone has equal access to services," said Adams, whosefamily is from Norway House First Nation and Berens River First Nation.

Translationfor essential services is also vital, he says, to ensure people can communicate and get vital informationin the language most comfortable to them.

Adams says when documents such as news articles or government documents are translated into Indigenous languages, it opens up the language to those who want to learnand see the language used in the same way as English and French.

"That's a value, to make sure that they can have translation in their language."

In a 2019 photo, Patricia Ningewance proudly displays a birthday card she received from her grandson, Aandeg Muldrew, written in syllabics, a writing system for Indigenous languages. (Albert Leung/CBC)

Ningewance says there's a real need for translators who can not only speak Indigenous languages, but read and write them as well. She wants to see less use of phonetic spelling which isn't standardized and leaves spelling choices up to individual interpreters and more focus on standard spelling which can be widely used.

"I can think of maybe two people who are really excellent spellers [of Ojibwayin Manitoba]. Two people," she said.

She says even when she reads writing from translators who are considered good spellers, she sees a lotof mistakes.

Ningewance, who used to teach an introduction to translation course at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ont., says she would love to teach a similar course here in Manitoba.

"There really has to be good spelling taught."