this post was submitted on 24 Nov 2023
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that is very nice to hear! i’m more in tune with my Yu’pik side, my great grandmother was fully Athabascan. she spoke no english, only her language and the local Yu’pik dialect. we don’t know much about her, she refused to tell us why she moved away from her family/ community. i’m thankful for all the research done, i know theres been a lot of Yu’pik collaborations with academics/ universities. my grandpa is in a couple archival videos, and my grandma is pictured (in a group) in the Alaska Native Museum here in anchorage :) i have also learned Yu’pik here at the local university, under Professor Mary Meade, a Yu’pik elder. im proud of all the work my people do to keep our culture well and alive. we have native olympics, native dance meets, native gatherings. all very well documented/ archived on youtube!
im also happy to see people curious and excited about our cultures here. i just wish i knew who was genuinely curious and excited to learn vs people who want to know about you one second and put you down the next. its a weird life. but thank you for taking time to tell me about the Sapir-Whorf hypotheses. i should look into it lol 👀