This little-studied Athabaskan language is down to three households which use it regularly. Recording the last fluent speakers of Kuskokwim in Alaska The goals of this work are to achieve a systematic documentation of the Tanacross grammar and lexicon, to provide literacy materials for speakers (including a conversational dictionary and collections of stories with English translations), and to contribute to our linguistic understanding of this little-studied language. Tanacross, an Alaskan Athabaskan language, has only a handful of native speakers, most over sixty years of age. Gary Holton - University of California, Santa Barbara Language data collection will be conducted for several languages in a region that has only recently been officially recognized as a distinct ethnic region. Captioned versions will be shown on cable access channels, and videotapes will be made available to the native speakers throughout the state. This project will produce two dramas starring native speakers of these two Native American languages, which are currently spoken in Oklahoma. Production of original television dramas in Choctaw and Creek.Īwarded to Alice Anderton of the Intertribal Wordpath Society. Production of original television dramas in Choctaw and Creek ©2024 Comanche Nation. Alice Anderton - Intertribal Wordpath Society The Comanche tribe currently has approximately 17,000 enrolled tribal members with around 7,000 residing in the tribal jurisdictional area around the Lawton, Ft Sill, and surrounding counties. The Comanche Nation’s main headquarters is located 9 miles north of Lawton, Oklahoma. All the while working to improve economic status, protect and manage the Nation's natural resources and cultural heritage. The mission of the Comanche Nation is to define, establish and safeguard the rights, powers and privileges of the tribe and its members, to improve the economic, moral, educational and health status of its members and to cooperate with and seek the assistance of the United States in carrying out mutual programs to accomplish these purposes by all possible means and to promote in other ways the common well-being of the tribe and its membership. The Comanche Business Committees' main objective is to carry out the mission of the Constitution of the Comanche Nation. The Chief Of Staff (formerly known as the Tribal Administrator) is also elected by the Tribal Council and responsible for the day-to-day operations of the Tribal Government. Seven elected officials that are voted into office by the Tribal Council fill the positions of Chairman, Vice-Chairman, Secretary/Treasurer, and the four seats of Committeeman which collectively are called the Comanche Business Committee (CBC). The Tribal Council which consists of all enrolled members over the age of 18 is the main governing body. The Comanche Nation is governed by the Constitution of the Comanche Nation. It provided food, clothing, tepee covering, and a wide variety of other goods for economical purposes. The buffalo was also an important resource for the people. Bands of the Comanche were formed on the basis of kinship and other social relationships. Comanche horsemen set the pattern of nomadic equestrian life that became characteristic of the Plains tribes in the 18th and 19th centuries. They were highly skilled at breeding and trading the horse, which became an important resource for the people that radically changed life on the plains. They fought battles on horseback which was a skill unknown among other Indian peoples of that time. The people mastered their skills on horseback and gained a tremendous advantage in times of war. The horse was a key element in Comanche culture. We ultimately settled here in Southwest Oklahoma. We Migrated across the Plains, through Wyoming, Nebraska, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Texas, and Oklahoma. In the late 1600’s and early 1700’s, we moved off from our Shoshone kinsmen onto the northern Plains and then southerly in search of a new homeland. We are known as “Lords of the Plains” and were once a part of the Shoshone Tribe. We are the Comanche Nation and in our native language “Nʉmʉnʉʉ” (NUH-MUH-NUH) which means, “The People”.
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