Nakon’i’a with Kunsi: How a puppet is reviving the Nakoda language
When Theresa O’Watch was a little girl growing up on Carry the Kettle First Nation, language lived all around her.
It wasn’t something written in books or taught from a curriculum. It was something that moved through kitchens and hallways, across the voices of grandparents, aunties, uncles.
Nakoda was simply there.
But as the years passed, the voices that once filled rooms grew quieter. Grandparents became memories. Aunts and uncles became stories from the past. The language that once lived everywhere began to thin out, until it became something she had to search for.




