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Scholar sole speaker of Huron language[Canada]
The Star ^ | 24 Dec 2007 | John Goddard

Posted on 12/25/2007 10:24:50 AM PST by BGHater

Teacher has published dictionary for once thriving Ontario tribe whose `Huron Carol' is Yule tradition

The world's last Huron-language speaker is a white man teaching at Humber College.

Anthropologist John Steckley has made the Huron tongue and Huron history his focus for more than 30 years, "and every year I think of how little I knew the year before," he says.

Sometimes he feels alone in his interests, he says. At other times, he feels in demand – especially around Christmas and particularly this one.

Earlier this month Steckley published an authoritative Huron-English dictionary, the first such volume in more than 250 years. Laval University also just received a $1 million federal grant to develop Huron-language teaching materials, drawing on Steckley's expertise.

And this is the season of "The Huron Carol," sometimes called "Canada's Christmas hymn."

Most church congregations and concert choirs know only the 1926 anglicized version, but every year singers contact Steckley to learn the 1643 original.

"The Huron version is much better," the professor says. "It's more filled with meaning and much more authentic. The Hurons didn't even have a Gitchi Manitou – that's an Ojibwa term."

The Huron were a mostly agricultural people living between two water bodies now called Lake Simcoe and Georgian Bay. Their first contact with white people came with the arrival of French fur traders in the early 1600s.

Death quickly followed. By 1640, disease had decimated Huron numbers and by 1650 the Beaver Wars had all but wiped them out.

Remnants of the tribe settled north of Quebec City at Lorette, and in Kansas and Oklahoma. The language long ago died, except in writing, but all three communities are working to revive it, Steckley says.

"I guess I'm the closest you could say passes for a Huron speaker," he says in a modest tone. "I have eight dictionaries of Huron at home, all 17th- and 18th-century, only one of which was ever published."

Written by French Jesuit missionaries, the volumes are "beautiful dictionaries, better than any in English at the time – by far," he says. "They are just amazing documents and they taught me."

Such records show that the long ago Huron were a musical people, Steckley says. They possessed an extensive vocabulary related to music and a rich repertoire of songs for all occasions.

The Jesuits, eager to win converts, composed others.

One was "The Huron Carol." Oral tradition attributes it to Jean de Brébeuf, the first Jesuit priest fluent in Huron who was later famous – and canonized – for his stoic calm while being tortured at the stake and scalped.

Between 1629 and his death in 1649, Brébeuf devoted himself to the Huronia mission centred at what is now Midland. He is believed to have written the carol while in Quebec City in 1643, although the earliest surviving transcription was made at Lorette in the 1700s.

The melody derives from a French song, "Une Jeune Pucelle (A Young Maid)," Steckley writes in an unpublished paper. The original title was "Jesus ahatonnia," meaning, "Jesus is Born" or more literally "he has just been made."

"The okie spirit who enslaved us has fled," the song begins in one of Steckley's translations. "Don't listen to him for he corrupts the spirits of our thoughts. Jesus is born."

If that sounds like heavy-handed proselytizing, the carol does convey how the Jesuits spoke and what their message was, Steckley says.

The hymn also contains culturally authentic metaphors, such as three elders greeting the newborn babe by anointing His scalp with sunflower oil – "a traditional sign of respect," the professor says.

In 1926, Jesse Edgar Middleton, a poet and historian from the Guelph area, wrote a charming – if inauthentic – English "interpretation" of the carol, setting the Nativity story in the Huron bush.

The newborn lies not in a manger in swaddling clothes, but "within a lodge of broken bark" tucked in "a ragged robe of rabbit skin."

Instead of wise men bearing gold, frankincense and myrrh, "Chiefs from far before Him knelt/with gifts of fox and beaver pelt."

The carol remains one of the most regularly performed Canadian songs, Steckley says.

Franco-Ontarian singer Michel Payment recently performed it in English, French and Huron during the First Light festival at Midland.

Bruce Cockburn also sang a Huron rendition on his 1993 album Christmas. "Special thanks are due to John Steckley," the liner notes read, "for his help as translator and pronunciation coach."

`Toronto' meaning lost in translation

Toronto means "trees standing in water."

It does not mean "meeting place" as popularly believed, says anthropologist John Steckley.

"Non-aboriginal knowledge of aboriginal languages is like a 5-year-old's knowledge of reproduction," he says. "They don't know, so they make up stuff."

"Toronto" is a Mohawk term, Steckley says. Originally, spelled "tkaronto" on early maps, the name was originally given to what is now called The Narrows, where Lake Simcoe empties into Lake Couchiching at Orillia.

It was where the Huron people and others for more than 4,000 years planted poles in the moving water to trap fish.

On successive maps, the name drifted southward and changed spelling.

In 1680, the name "Lac de Taronto" was given to what is now Lake Simcoe. In 1686, the canoe route from there to Lake Ontario was labelled "passage de Taronto."

And in the 1720s, a French fort east of the mouth of the Humber River – in what is now Toronto – was identified as "Fort Toronto."

Lieut.-Gov. John Graves Simcoe in 1793 renamed the area York, but in 1834 the older name was restored.


TOPICS: Canada; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: canada; epigraphyandlanguage; godsgravesglyphs; humbercollege; huron; huroncarol; johnsteckley; language; ontario
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To: ClearCase_guy

oppressor?


21 posted on 12/25/2007 12:15:42 PM PST by thefactor
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To: chemicalman
i wrote this song about a drifter i killed in spokane...

"Sweet Caroline!"

22 posted on 12/25/2007 12:17:37 PM PST by thefactor
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To: ClearCase_guy
a thread about a pastor who regularly "spoke in tongues" -- until someone in the congregation realized that he was speaking one of JRR Tolkien's Elvish languages

That was from a Christian satire site.

23 posted on 12/25/2007 12:21:49 PM PST by Tax-chick ("The keys to life are running and reading." ~ Will Smith)
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To: Tolerance Sucks Rocks

Here’s another news flash from the “Freak” State! LOL!!


24 posted on 12/25/2007 12:25:25 PM PST by Albion Wilde ("Whatever enables us to go to war, secures our peace." —Thomas Jefferson)
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To: Right Republican
One was “The Huron Carol.” Oral tradition attributes it to Jean de Brébeuf, the first Jesuit priest fluent in Huron who was later famous – and canonized – for his stoic calm while being tortured at the stake and scalped.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^66

Here is another truth that “slipped out”.

I bet the priest Jean de Brébeuf didn’t torture anyone. In fact, I bet part of his mission was teaching these savage and primitive people not to torture each other.

25 posted on 12/25/2007 12:32:30 PM PST by wintertime (Good ideas win! Why? Because people are not stupid.)
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To: BGHater
I know this... well, dope, who’s life dream is to translate the Old Testament into Creek, or Iroquois, or some language, and teach it to the “Native Americans”.

The difficulty is that he’s having a devil of a time learning the language, since nobody speaks it anymore and then he’d have to teach the “Native Americans” how to speak it again.

Typical Liberal do gooder swimming up stream and jousting at windmills.

26 posted on 12/25/2007 2:18:28 PM PST by End Times Sentinel (In Memory of my Dear Friend Henry Lee II)
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To: joshhiggins; Abundy; Albion Wilde; AlwaysFree; AnnaSASsyFR; bayliving; BFM; cindy-true-supporter; ..

Maryland “Freak State” PING to #19.


27 posted on 12/25/2007 2:57:50 PM PST by Tolerance Sucks Rocks (Tagline auction at this location, 01/01/2008)
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To: ClearCase_guy

Well that’s a cute story, but don’t for one second believe that speaking in tongues is some fakery or “elvish-speak”.

The lack of knowledge of the gifts of the spirit in the secular/mainstream denominational worlds is nothing short of shocking.


28 posted on 12/25/2007 4:07:12 PM PST by RightOnline
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To: Right Republican

Russians on the West coast too...

Plenty of pale skinned, blue eyed, red haired Natives along the West coast where I am from...


29 posted on 12/27/2007 9:53:16 AM PST by MD_Willington_1976
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To: BGHater

30 posted on 12/27/2007 9:56:55 AM PST by wardaddy (I have come to the conclusion that even though imperfect....Thompson is my choice by far.)
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To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; decimon; 1010RD; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; ...
Note: this topic is from 12/25/2007. Thanks BGHater.

31 posted on 02/26/2016 12:05:23 PM PST by SunkenCiv (Here's to the day the forensics people scrape what's left of Putin off the ceiling of his limo.)
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To: Jeff Chandler

Beaver wars! When I was younger I would get involved in one almost every night. Now I’m lucky if I get in a tussle once a week.


32 posted on 02/26/2016 1:52:52 PM PST by ABN 505 (Right is right if nobody is right, and wrong is wrong if everybody is wrong. ~Archbishop Fulton John)
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To: BGHater

Maybe I’m late to the party, but the excellent Canadian film “Black Robe” has a lot to say on these subjects.


33 posted on 02/28/2016 11:23:42 AM PST by dsc (Any attempt to move a government to the left is a crime against humanity.)
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