Recording Kawaiisu

Roles: Assistant Editor, Location Sound Mixer

Awards: 2020 Webby Award Winner (Best Editorial Feature), Big Sky Documentary Film Festival Selection

About Language Keepers

There was once more linguistic variety in California than there is in all of Europe combined. That was before a cultural genocide. Starting in the 1880s, the United States government forced a generation of Native American children into boarding schools. They were told to forget their way of life and learn English. An array of different languages from a number of different language families were being threatened. Today, many dialects have only a handful of fluent speakers remaining. Some have none.

Language Keepers is a six-part multimedia experience that tells the story of native peoples that refuse to let go of their language. Through leading classes, immersing children in the language, and documenting the language for future learners, these four California tribes are joining a movement of native peoples making sure the songs, stories, and ceremonies of their people are not lost.

Following a century of loss, the Kawaiisu people of Central California have held on to their language, one of the few aspects of their culture that remain intact. Now, with only two fluent speakers remaining, Julie Girado Turner has spent the last 16 years documenting the language that lives within her elderly father and aunt so that it may be passed on and learned by others.

Note This is just one small piece of a multi-chapter online experience. View the entire Language Keepers story on  Emergence Magazine.