Risa
First Congressional District of New Mexico
GO

Home

About Heather

District Profile

Constituent Services

News Center

Issues

E-News

Student Corner

Contact Heather

White Line Space
Default Image
Bottom Shadow
Left Space Hot Topics Left Space
Hot Topics Lines Welcome Home Hot Topics Lines

Hot Topics Lines Economic Stimulus Hot Topics Lines

Hot Topics Lines Social Security Debit Cards Hot Topics Lines

 

Left Space
Contact
Left Space


ask.heather@mail.house.gov

In Washington DC
442 Cannon House
Office Building
Washington, DC
20515
202-225-6316 Phone
202-225-4975 Fax
In Albuquerque
20 First Plaza NW
Suite 603
Albuquerque, NM
87102
505-346-6781 Phone
505-346-6723 Fax

White Line Space
Ojito Wilderness
White Line Space
E-news Submit Button
Printer Friendly
White Line Space

Congresswoman Heather Wilson, First Congressional District of New Mexico


Releases
space
Rep. Wilson Working on $200,000 Native American Language Program September 21, 2007
 

Rep. Wilson Working on $200,000 for Native American
Language Program at UNM

Wilson Requested Funds in Education Spending Bill and also secured $3 Million for Esther Martinez Language Preservation Efforts

On the UNM Campus – Congresswoman Heather Wilson today announced that she’s working to secure $200,000 for a Native American Language program at the University of New Mexico.  Wilson says she successfully inserted the money in the Labor, Health and Human Services appropriations bill currently making its way through the Congress. 

The bill containing the funds, the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Act for FY 2008, passed the House of Representatives on July 19, 2007.  Action on the bill is pending in the Senate.  The bill also includes $3 million for the Esther Martinez program, which Rep. Wilson spearheaded.

The funding for the University of New Mexico’s American Indian Language Policy Research and Teacher Training Center will be used to train instructors and conduct research to help preserve Native American languages.

“We’re working to preserve these native languages and this UNM program helps accomplish that goal” Wilson said. “Once lost, they will never be recovered.”

“The significance of the Esther Martinez Language Act and its potential benefit to New Mexico tribes and other tribes working to maintain and revitalize their Native language cannot be underestimated when one considers how few languages are now being learned and spoken by Native children and school-age generations,” say Dr. Blum-Martinez & Dr. Christine Sims, who run UNM’s program.  “This is especially critical where Native languages are the means by which tribal communities maintain their oral histories, transmit their cultural knowledge and spiritual life ways. The growing challenge that faces every tribal language community has been to find the appropriate means with which to address a rapidly growing phenomenon of language shift.”

In New Mexico, where there are 21 tribes representing six different languages, many of the first steps towards addressing these challenges have been taken by some tribes.  Some have initiated community-based and school based language efforts utilizing the language resources of their communities such as elders, grandparents and other tribal members to help teach their language.  However, the need remains for intensive training support and technical assistance in order for these efforts to flourish.

“Legislative appropriations for such a Center are the critical means by which tribes can be supported in their efforts to sustain their native languages and ensure that these continue for future generations,” say Sims and Blum-Martinez. 

Wilson has a long history of working on Native American Language issues. In December 2006, President Bush signed into law the Wilson-sponsored Esther Martinez Native Languages Preservation Act, and today Wilson welcomed news of funding to implement the effort. Named to honor the life and memory of Tewa storyteller, Esther Martinez of New Mexico, the new law helps prevent the loss of the Native American languages that are rapidly disappearing.

The bill was designated following the death of Mrs. Martinez last year. On September 14, 2006, Esther Martinez of Ohkay Owingeh was awarded a National Heritage Fellowship in Washington, DC, through the National Endowment for the Arts. She was killed in a car accident at 94 years of age in Espanola while driving home after attending the ceremony in Washington.

Sadly, only an estimated 20 of more than 300 pre-colonial indigenous languages will remain by the year 2050. In 1996, 175 of these languages remained, but now we’re losing them at a rate of 12 languages every 3 years. New Mexico is home to 19 different pueblos and 3 tribes. Among the tribes and pueblos, there are six major languages, plus varying dialects. Language is a key element of each community’s identity.

A recent survey of Native languages found that among the Lipan Apache on the Mescalero reservation in southern New Mexico there are just ten speakers of the native language remaining. At the Sandia Pueblo, north of Albuquerque, most of their Native speakers are middle aged or older. Even Navajo, spoken more than any other Native Language in the U.S., is spoken fluently by less than half of the Navajo children entering kindergarten.

The Esther Martinez Act was written and introduced by Congresswoman Heather Wilson in February 2006, then was passed by the House in September followed by the Senate with the support of the entire New Mexico delegation.   In addition to the $200,000 appropriation designated for UNM, the bill includes $3 million for implementing the Esther Martinez Native American Languages Preservation Act.

- END -
space



Privacy Statement
| Toolbox | Hablas Español?