The Lakota Language Consortium had promised to preserve the tribe’s native language and had spent years gathering recordings of elders, including Taken Alive’s grandmother, to create a new, standardized Lakota dictionary and textbooks.

But when Taken Alive, 35, asked for copies, he was shocked to learn that the consortium, run by a white man, had copyrighted the language materials, which were based on generations of Lakota tradition. The traditional knowledge gathered from the tribe was now being sold back to it in the form of textbooks.

“No matter how it was collected, where it was collected, when it was collected, our language belongs to us. Our stories belong to us. Our songs belong to us,” Taken Alive, who teaches Lakota to elementary school students, told the tribal council in April.

The legal fundraising page for the man in the article is here

  • The Pantser@lemmy.world
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    16 days ago

    Agree, it’s like math you don’t own math or how to do math but math books are copyrighted. The guy did some serious work in speaking to the elders and documenting the language. Grated the tribe should have gotten some free copies for their participation. Nobody is stopping the tribe from taking those books and rewriting them using the translations from the book and then teaching the language to their descendants. They own the language.