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Crude Conversations

Chatter Marks EP 83 Moving home, revitalizing a language and the magic of radio with Shyanne Beatty

Crude Conversations

crudemag

Society & Culture

5884 Ratings

🗓️ 28 March 2024

⏱️ 68 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

For years, Shyanne Beatty has wanted to move back home to Eagle, Alaska. It’s where everything started for her — her love for culture, language, art and music. Today, she sits on her property in Eagle, along the Yukon River, and she imagines herself as a young girl, running down the river banks with about 20 sled dogs or trapping marten out at 40 Mile or walking to school, singing to herself to ward off any curious wildlife. Reflecting on this, she realized that music has been foundational for so much in her life, it’s carried her and it’s protected her. Radio too. She remembers one Thanksgiving out at 40 Mile, she and her dad were listening to “Trapline Chatter” and they heard her grandparents wishing them a Happy Thanksgiving. The reach of radio had made its impression on her. So, when she left Eagle, that passion for radio and love for culture, language, art and music manifested itself in “Earthsongs,” the radio show she hosted on KNBA in Anchorage. It highlighted indigenous artists, musicians, and it was the first nationally-syndicated show out of the state of Alaska. Shyanne is in the process of revitalizing her Native language, Han Hwechin Athabascan. There are only four people left who can speak the language, and she says the process of learning it has been difficult because people have been resistant to teaching her. This is because land, subsistence rights, language, culture and even children were taken away from her people. So, the insistence on guarding these things is understandable. To learn the language, Shyanne resorted to a more academic setting, mainly through classes. Lately, for about six hours a week, she’s been working with her aunt to continue learning and documenting the language. Usually they get together and cook, chatting with each other in Han Hwechin the whole time. And for all this, she wanted to be back in Eagle, on her traditional lands; to have that sense of place and belonging. Because learning and documenting her culture and lifeways is one thing, but it’s also about creating a reservoir of culture that future generations can learn from.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I never thought that I was going to have some historical trauma show up.

0:18.0

I thought it was all going to be beautiful. I thought it was going to be

0:21.0

this magical thing that I was going to learn the language and it was going to be so wonderful, but there comes a lot of hurt with that because people were told not to speak their language and you know people lost that

0:35.8

language a lot because they were in fear of what would happen to them if they

0:42.3

use the language.

0:43.2

So that fear was instilled in them

0:46.0

and they didn't want to teach their children

0:48.2

or their children's children to speak the language

0:51.2

because back then you would get your mouth washed out with soap and worse things would happen.

0:56.4

I mean, we could go and talking about boarding schools and that's a whole other subject, but

1:01.6

it has been a rewarding and loving journey but it's also been a very

1:09.2

painful journey too. That was Cheyenne Beaty, and for years she's wanted to move back home to Eagle Alaska.

1:18.0

It's where everything started for her, her love for culture, language, art, and music.

1:25.0

Today, she sits on her property in Eagle, along the Yukon River,

1:30.0

and she imagines herself as a young girl, running down the riverbanks with about 20 sled dogs,

1:35.9

or trapping Martin out at 40 Mile, or walking to school, singing to herself to ward off any curious wildlife.

1:45.0

Reflecting on this, she realized that music has been foundational for so much in her life.

1:51.0

It's carried her and it's protected her. Radio too.

1:56.2

She remembers one Thanksgiving out at 40 Mile. She and her dad were listening to

2:01.4

Trapline Chatter and they heard her grandparents wishing

2:04.8

them a happy Thanksgiving.

2:07.4

The reach of radio had made its impression on her.

...

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