Rare Indigenous sign language revival takes centre stage at Poundmaker Cree Nation festival
A rare Indigenous sign language that organizers say has largely fallen out of use will be taught to the public next month at Poundmaker Cree Nation, where a three-day festival aims to help bring it back into everyday life.
Running July 21 to 23, the annual Poundmaker Indigenous Performance Festival and Plains Indian Sign Language Workshop combines live performances with language learning, bringing together local poets, writers, storytellers and artists alongside guest performers from across Canada and overseas.
For Floyd Favel, curator of the Poundmaker Museum and organizer of the festival, the workshop is about more than preserving history.
“It’s a language that has been neglected, but we’re bringing it back from the brink of extinction and back into daily use,” he said. “We’ve revived it in the last eight years.”



