Working to Keep Nahuat, the Language of the Pipil People, from Vanishing in El Salvador
By Edgardo Ayala
Elena López (left), one of two teachers who teach Náhuat to children in Nahuizalco, in western El Salvador, leads one of the morning's learning practices, in which the children, walking in circles, sing songs in the language of their ancestors, the Pipil people. CREDIT: Edgardo Ayala / IPS
NAHUIZALCO, El Salvador , May 6 2024 (IPS) - A group of children participating in an immersion program in Náhuat, the language of the Pipil people and the only remaining pre-Hispanic language in El Salvador, are the last hope that the language will not die out.
This effort aims to keep Náhuat alive and that is why we focus on the children, for them to continue and preserve this important part of our culture, Elena López told IPS during a short snack break for the preschoolers she teaches.
López is part of the Náhuat Cuna project, which since 2010 has sought to preserve and revive the endangered indigenous language through early immersion. She is one of two teachers who teach it to children between the ages of three and five at a preschool center in Nahuizalco, a municipality in the department of Sonsonate in western El Salvador.
At risk of disappearing
When a language dies, the basis of indigenous cultures and territories becomes extinct with it, says the report Revitalization of Indigenous Languages, according to which the 500 Amerindian languages still spoken in Latin America are all in a situation of greater or lesser threat or risk.
In Mesoamerica, which includes Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Costa Rica, 75 indigenous languages are spoken, says the study by the Fund for the Development of the Indigenous Peoples of Latin America and the Caribbean (FILAC).
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https://www.ipsnews.net/2024/05/working-keep-nahuat-language-pipil-people-vanishing-el-salvador/