Indigenous languages educator launches animated video series in Anishinaabemowin - Action News
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Indigenous languages educator launches animated video series in Anishinaabemowin

An expert in teaching Indigenous languages has just launched a new cartoon series for children that's entirely in Anishinaabemowin.

Barbara Nolan just released the first 10 videos in her series

A woman in a black shirt stands in front of a cartoon farm scene depicting a barn, windmill, fields, sheep, cows, chickens, and a pig.
Barbara Nolan's new Nishnaabemwin video series sees her interacting with an animated environment. (YouTube.com)

AnIndigenous languages educator based in Garden River First Nationhas just launched a new animatedvideo series for children that's entirely in Anishinaabemowin.

Barbara Nolan said the three- to eight-minute vignettes feature her interacting with an animated environment.

"One video is about who lives in this barn," Nolan explained.

"So in the background is a picture of a farm like a comic farm with a barn. And so I point to the barn and then I'll say, 'Oh, listen,and then there might be somebody coming.' A cow might come walking across in front of me The word for cow is bzhiki. So people will catch on."

The videos are notsubtitled, Nolan said.

"Kids pick up," she said.

"They'll pick up the language that's on the video."

Nolan is a lifelong speaker of Anishinaabemowinwho has spent decades revitalizing the language.

She has developed an immersion program and a language learning app,teaches the languageand consults with First Nations about developing their own language training programs.

Her latest project, she said, was inspired by her work in daycare in Garden River, where she noticed staff would keep children indoors on rainy or overly hot days and keep them occupied by showing them cartoons.

She met a teacher at an event on Walpole Island who had a number of English animations on his website, and she recruited him to help make her vision a reality, she explained.

Now children have somewhere they can go online to learn their language in a way that's designed for kids, she said.

"We are losing our fluent speakers on a daily basis," Nolansaid.

"They're dying, OK?. And I'm not going to live forever, and I do a lot of work with language. So I may as well do these videosand the videos will live on."

A lot of communities no longer have language speakersand they are longing for their language, she added.

Until now, there were no videos in the Ojibway language for elementary schools or daycares.

"So this is perfect for that," she said, "for First Nations daycares that don't have access to speakers."

With files from Warren Schlote