Gaps in census data collection may show incomplete picture of Indigenous languages - Action News
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Indigenous

Gaps in census data collection may show incomplete picture of Indigenous languages

Dialects of Inuktitut and Cree are the main Indigenous languages spoken in Canada, according to a new report by Statistics Canada on languages.

Inuktitut, Cree are Indigenous languages spoken most at home, according to 2021 census

A stop sign, with English, French and Inuit syllabics, in a snowy Arctic community.
A stop sign in English, French and Inuktitut is seen in Iqaluit. According to the 2021 census, Inuktitut was theIndigenous language spoken predominantly at home by the most people in Canada. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Dialects of Inuktitut and Cree are the main Indigenous languages spoken in Canada, according to newdata from the 2021 census released on Wednesday.

However, the report says incomplete datamissing from several dozen First Nations communities may have impacted the results.

According to Statistics Canada, dwelling enumeration could not be completed in 38 communities due to pandemic restrictions or events such as evacuation from forest fires, while 25 First Nations communities did not give permission for census workers to enter their territories last year.

Kahnawake, a Kanien'keh:ka (Mohawk) community south of Montreal,has historicallynot participated in the census.

"We're not Canadian. So we don't belong in the Canadian census," said Ietsnhaienhs (council chief) Teiotsistohkwathe Jessica Lazare at the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake.

Lazare said there arealso concerns about thecommunity's data sovereignty.

"We can't really control how that information is going to be used," she said.

Kahnawake Ietsnhaienhs (council chief) Teiotsistohkwathe Jessica Lazare. (Submitted by Teiotsistohkwathe Jessica Lazare)

It's why Kahnawake has conducted its own studies or surveys, including on the health ofKanien'kha, or the Mohawk language. The results of the census reflect some trends of what is known about the language.

What does 2021 censusdata show about Indigenous languages?

Based on the data collected in the census, the number of individuals who reported speaking an Indigenouslanguage as their first language declined 6.8 per cent from 2016 to 2021, to 189,000, and 183,000 people speak an Indigenous language regularly at home.

More individuals could conduct a conversation in an Indigenous language 243,000 people indicating that Indigenous languages are being learned as second languages.

Inuktitut and Cree languages were theIndigenous languages spoken predominantly at home by the most people, with 27,140 speaking Inuktitut and 26,690 speaking Cree languages.

Mi'kmawwas the most common Indigenous language spoken predominantly at home in the Atlantic provinces, except for in Labrador where it was Innu.Dialects of Cree were the most widely spoken Indigenous languages in Quebec and the Prairie provinces, while in Ontario, Anishinaabemowin dialects were most common.

Largest number of first language speakers in Quebec

Of those who speak an Indigenous language as their first language, alone or with another language, four in 10 lived in one of the Prairie provinces and one-quarter lived in Quebec.The largest number of people 45,600 with at least one Indigenous first language were also located in Quebec.

Indigenous languages were also spoken by significant populations in Saskatchewan (27,500), Manitoba (26,500), Alberta (24,600) and Nunavut (23,000).

Nearly four out of five people whose first languagewas an Indigenous language reported speakingthat language at home at least on a regular basis (78.2 per cent) and more than half spoke it predominantly at home (51.3 per cent)

In 2021, approximately three-quarters of those people whose first language wasAtikamekw, Innu, Inu Ayimun (Southern East Cree) or Inuktitut spoke that language predominantly at home.

Endangered languages

According to theUnited Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization(UNESCO),there are 86 distinctIndigenous languages in Canada. The majority of those languages remain endangered including Kanien'kha.

For Lazare, the data collected needs to be more than just quantitative.A fuller picture on the health of a language is also a source of motivation, she said, for those tackling language revitalization efforts

"It's a huge journey and a huge undertaking," said Lazare, whograduated in 2019 from the Kanien'kha Ratiwennahn:rats Adult Immersion Program before getting elected to council.

"It's important to have the bigger picture to look at the health of our language in order to adapt and change and overcome some of the challenges that present itself."