Lil'wat student goes to UBC to learn how to help revitalize Ucwalmcwts - Action News
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Lil'wat student goes to UBC to learn how to help revitalize Ucwalmcwts

The Lilwat Nation, an Interior Salish people living in Mount Currie, B.C., has more than 2,000 members but there are only a few hundred left that speak the Ucwalmcwts language fluently.

'I really love my own language and I want to learn how to bring it home,' says Lexlixatkwa7 Nelson

Lexlixatkwa7 Nelson is a student at the University of British Columbia studying First Nations and Endangered Languages. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Lexlixatkwa7 Nelson likes to quoteher favourite line from Yvonne Wallace's one-woman theatrical production called tszan.

"Ucwalmcwts need to speak Ucwalmcwts," she says.

"It means 'Our people need to speak our language.'"

Nelson, 19, is a second year student at the University of British Columbia and is enrolled in the First Nations and Endangered Languages Program.

She is part of the Lil'wat Nation in Mount Currie, B.C., and is motivated to learn her language, Ucwalmcwts. The Lil'wat Nation has more than 2,000 members but there are only a few hundred left that speak the Ucwalmcwts language fluently.

"It's part of your identity and when you can't speak it anymore, it's like something's missing and I don't think that feeling will ever go away unless I learn the language," Nelson said.

As a four-year-old, she was enrolled in a language nest program where she was taught the language till she was eight. From that point on, English was the language of instruction in herclassesand her use of Ucwalmcwts became dormant until she enteredPembertonsecondary school where she was able to sign up for Ucwalmcwts classes.

Language learning helps Ucwalmcwts woman connect to her identity

4 years ago
Duration 6:40
"It's part of your identity and when you can't speak it anymore, it's like something's missing," says Lexlixatkwa7 Nelson.

Now, in university she is learning to document and transcribe Indigenous languages through audio recordings all while increasing her knowledge ofUcwalmcwts through a dictionary.

"Some students want to take languages we don't teach at UBC," said Mark Turin, as associate professor at UBC and a former chair of the First Nations and Endangered Languages Program.

"We find clever ways for them to get credit for their work."

In late 2018, the B.C. Ministry of Advanced Education approved a degree for the First Nations and Endangered Languages Program, a first for the province and the university.

UBC's First Nations Longhouse is a centre for Aboriginal students with study and social spaces. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

So far, six students have declared majors and two have declared minors in the program, which is expecting its first graduates in the spring of 2020.

The programis flexible,to manage the variety of Indigenous languages in Canada.

"It's strongly connected to the practice and the work of linguistics and also of anthropology," said Turin.

Students learn about how language is connected to their community, their land and their traditions.

"It's not just about words and grammar," he said.

"Language shows us more about our culture and it's linked to identity," saidNelson.

She giggles at theUcwalmcwts word kelwl which means barbecue tree mossand wonders why the word exists but acknowledges the word must be rooted in purpose.

"It's so specific, it makes you realize we must have used it for something traditional."

Nelson intends to major in the endangered languages program and saidit's the reason she came to UBC.

Her hope is to ultimately create an animated series that would be solely spoken in Ucwalmcwts and used as a learning tool for future generations.

"I really love my own language and I want to learn how to bring it home," she said.


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