MORTON, MINN. – A language at risk of dying is taking on new life with Trella Oldrock and other teens.
This fall, for the first time, a class in Dakota is being offered for high school students here on the Lower Sioux Indian Reservation as part of a statewide effort to revitalize American Indian languages.
"Without our language and culture, we're just people," said Oldrock, a 15-year-old sophomore who signed up for the class. "I want to keep it alive."
Only a few people who grew up in the state and learned Dakota as their first language are still living. Just last week, the last fluent speaker of the Lower Sioux, who recently died, was buried here, giving new urgency to teacher Ryan Dixon's mission to pass on the language skills to others before it's too late.
"Within my lifetime that's going to be gone," he said of speakers who are fluent in Dakota. "Words have been lost."
While the Lower Sioux community has offered Dakota language classes for middle school students and adults, Dixon said his yearlong class is the first to be offered for credit at the high school level in southern Minnesota and is one of only a few of its kind in the state.
"Slowly we're starting to regain the things we lost," he said.
The twice-a-week, two-hour night class meets at a center on the reservation, located along the bluffs of the Minnesota River two hours southwest of the Twin Cities.