[Foundation-l] Cherokee Wikipedia Name Suggestion
Jeffrey V. Merkey
jmerkey at wolfmountaingroup.com
Fri Jul 14 05:40:43 UTC 2006
Ray Saintonge wrote:
>Jeff V. Merkey wrote:
>
>
>
>>Oldak Quill wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>>Not at all. The best way to improve the site would be to work with
>>>other langauge Wikipedias and within Wikimedia. Are you being active
>>>in seeking members?
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>Yes, I am, however, our culture is alien to the Wikipedia culture and
>>there are going to be issues
>>with the way the site operates. So far every Cherokee who has edited on
>>WP has gotten banned
>>or scrutinized to the point they leave. We have a concept of respecting
>>the space of a person who is working on something.
>>
>>
>>
>I guess this is a question of what you mean by Wikipedia culture. The
>concept of respect is a big part of it. The English Wikipedia just has
>a lot of ravens running around trying to impose it.
>
>
More like swift birds of prey, not intellectual ravens, I've got several
sets of talon marks on my
keyboard from WP experiences to show. :-)
>
>
>>WP 's policies allow a 16 year old with a computer to come in and
>>disrupt someone else's work and this
>>doesn;t work for us. Our culture is based on mutual respect, and I
>>believe WP and Wales operate on the
>>premise people on WP should be the same way. This has not been the
>>course followed. I think WP should
>>continue and we can do hat we need with the content -- off site where
>>our cultural issues can coexist peacefully.
>>
>>
>>
>Mutual respect is not a function of an editor's age. There can just as
>easily be wise youth as there can be foolish elders.
>
The whole power admin thing is out of hand on the site. I think the energy
of peoples karma can come home to roost, good and bad. WP is a lot like
the trading floor of
the New York Stock Exchange when folks get going. Sound like someone we
all know and love? :-)
>
>
>
>
>>You wont get many native people editing here due to the way the site is
>>organized -- respect for others is
>>lacking in the way articles are edited. It's ok though, we can still
>>both be successful if we figure out a way
>>to create dual environments where folks can be successful.
>>
>>
>>
>I'm sure it's not the only reason they stay away. But the reason that
>you cite for the absence of first nations people can just as easily
>apply to people from other cultures, including ones whose only language
>is English.
>
>
One main reason is a lot of them are disinterested and don't have the
resources. There are also
political and religous issues as well for a lot of our folks.
>
>
>>I am meeting with the tribal council of the Ute, Shoshone, and Unita
>>Nations on July 18, at 1:30 in Fort Duschene
>>on the machine translations for their Wikipedia, so I am making
>>excellent progress. They also expressed a desire
>>to host their content off Wikipedia due to their review of the issues
>>with how the site works -- its alien to most native
>>cultures.
>>
>>
>>
>I guess this depends on what you mean by "how the site works". I would
>certainly not encourage machine translations; the results are often
>something that makes native speakers laugh. Although technical material
>about how the site works is probably best translated, beyond that each
>language Wikipedia (or other project) develops its own culture.
>
>
>
Well, this machine translation and the software is being done by a
Native speaker, and since the template is my brain for how the
translations are done in software, one could say I translated them with
a machine assist due to volume, so I guess one could say they
were done by a Native Speaker and member of the culture. Once they have
a large volume of content to edit, I think we are ok.
There have been a few words I've had to adapt to. I use a link parser
for english decomposition then take the decomposed strings
of morphemes and remap and tense them into Cherokee. Cherokee has a
rigid structure so this makes it a lot easier to do. I do proofread and
the latest run is now at 98% completeness and accuracy. I am shooting
for 100% by the end of the summer.
>>The Ute's believe their language is sacred and they don't
>>want non speakers working on it for religious
>>reasons. You are going to find this is a prevalent attitude among
>>Native Peoples. The ute's did not even allow their
>>langauge to be written down until the mid 1970's due to their religious
>>beliefs, so this is a big step for them.
>>
>>
>>
>I have no basis for making comments specific to the Utes, but the
>linkage between language and culture is a well known one. This kind of
>connection where language was a part of the introduction to a culture's
>mysteries is even a common theme in European cultures. If it's meant to
>be the Ute material will come in its own time.
>
>
Correct. Not my call. I expect some of their own ambitious folks will
drive that to happen. We just need to
give them the space to come to that conclusion on their own.
Jeff
>Ec
>
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