Mtis woman's journey with Michif language led her from Japan to a rural Manitoba community - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 11:59 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Indigenous

Mtis woman's journey with Michif language led her from Japan to a rural Manitoba community

Heather Souter is a Mtis linguist who started learning Michif at 43. On her journey, she has built her own resources and is now beginning to build her own community of Michif speakers.

Heather Souter learned the language later in life and has become a teacher

Heather Souter, far right, at a master-apprentice language learning program one-day training in Brandon, Man., in 2017. Souter says she is grateful for all of the Mtis people who have helped her on her language journey. (Submitted by Heather Souter)

Heather Souter has always had a love of languages. When she graduated fromthe University of British Columbia, she moved to Japan to learn Japanese and worked as an interpreter for 20 years.

While living in Japan, Souter, who is Mtis, did some research on Michif, the Mtis language. She realized how endangered her traditionallanguage was and decided to move home andhelprevitalize it.

But first, she had to learn how to speak it.

"It was really difficult to make connections In my family I couldn't find anyone, really anyone that spoke any Indigenous language anymore," said Souter.

Souter was born and raised in Vancouver.Her connection to the Mtis nation comes from her dad, Ken Souter, whodidn't know the language, but still raised his daughter to be proud of her ancestry.

When she set out to find people who could teach her Michif, she found out that there was a concentration of people who could speak Michifin Camperville, Man.

Camperville is a small Mtis community just over 400 kilometresnorthwest of Winnipeg.

"Some elders in Camperville welcomed me and that's how it all started," saidSouter.

In 2003, she travelled with a small team of Mtis people interested in learning Michif to take part in the master-apprentice program bytheAdvocates for Indigenous California Language Survival.

A woman with grey hair holds a cat.
Heather Souter is a Mtis linguist who started learning Michif at 43. She is now teaching a Michif language course at the University of Manitoba. (Submitted by Heather Souter)

The program connects elders and or fluent language speakers with apprentice language learnersone-on-one and gives them the tools and techniques to learn the language.

Theprogram partnered Souter with Mtis elder Grace Zoldy of Camperville, andSouter would spend a lot of time in the Manitoba community. So muchtime that shemet her future husband there andeventually moved there permanently.

Building a language community

When Souter began learning the language in the early 2000s, she estimates there were about 1,000 people who spoke the four different Michif dialects. Today, she guesses that there are between 100 and 200 fluent speakers left.

However, she said there has been a push among young Mtis people who are eager to learn and reclaim their language.
These days, she describes herself as a language revitalization activist and advocate.

Heather Souter at the master-apprentice program training in Arcata, Calif., in the early 2000s. The program is offered by the Advocates for Indigenous California Language Survival. (Submitted by Heather Souter)

Souternowuses English, French,Michif andJapanese, and can speak someAnishinaabemowin, Cree, German and Spanish.

She taught a Michifcourse at the University of Manitobaover the past summer.

"It took over two years to convince the institution that, of the 1,400 Mtis students, and 27,000 students on campus, that we could find 25 people to take the course," said Laura Forsythe,who is Mtis from Roostertown and the Mtis Inclusion co-ordinator at the U of M.

Laura Forsythe (centre) is the Mtis inclusion co-ordinator at the University of Manitoba. She made it a priority to have a Michif course offered at the institution. (Adam Dolman)

When the university approved the course, Forsythe had a difficult time finding someonefluent enough in the languageand also had the capacity to teach the course. Then she found Souter.

"It's absolutely incredible," said Forsythe. "We're reviving a speech community in a place that it was almost erased. We have students on campus daily, meeting each other, and speaking Michif to each other."

With every passing year, there are fewer fluentMichifspeakers. Souter's hope is that her studentsare not only becoming her language peers but also creating a new community.

"That's what it's all about," said Souter. "We're doing that together and also helping people become basically language revitalizationists."


CBC Indigenous is highlighting a few of the many diverse Indigenous languages that exist across the country.Read more from the Original Voices project.