The Miami Tribe of Oklahoma received a prestigious national award in 2023 in recognition of the cultural heritage and language program that has led to the first generation in 100 years learning to speak the Myaamia language.
Myaamia staff and students will introduce festival-goers to their language. Taking a lead role will be Elliot Baldwin, who will graduate in December with a bachelor’s degree in Psychology.
“I’ve been working on the dictionary with my brother (Jarrid Baldwin) for the past year, so going to D.C. is going to be a good chance for me, on a more professional level, discuss the language and how it works as well as other aspects.”
Baldwin grew up immersed in the Myaamia culture. His father is Daryl Baldwin, executive director of the Myaamia Center credited with getting the revitalization underway in 2001; his mother, Karen Baldwin, makes commencement stoles adorned with ribbonwork for Myaamia graduates each year.
Elliot and his sister, Jessie, will serve as program coordinators for the camps for children ages 6-9, and he’ll also be in charge of lacrosse and teaching the language at the Myaamia youth camps in Indiana and Oklahoma.
George Ironstrack, assistant director of the Myaamia Center and director of the education office, said this summer’s internship (supported with a $40,000 grant from the Henry Luce Foundation) and the festival will be valuable experiences for these young leaders.
“To be able to spend time in our language, in our culture, with each other in a way the busy nature of the semester doesn’t allow for, it’s one of the things that is so amazing this summer," he said.
“We won’t know for five, maybe even 10 years later, the positive impact of the seeds we’re planting during this time with them, but it’s going to be exciting to watch the outcomes in the long-term for some young people to get this degree of time with their language, their culture, and each other," Ironstrack said as he, Strass, and the students gathered at kitahkinaani 'our garden' outside Boyd Hall on Miami’s Western campus, where milkweed, peppermint, sassafras, and other native plants are grown.