When a language dies, a specific understanding of the world and a culture formed over centuries dies with it.

Every 14 days a language dies – we follow the indigenous people battling to reclaim their language and their culture.
When a language dies, a specific understanding of the world and a culture formed over centuries dies with it.
The traditional storytelling of indigenous cultures is moving into a new era and new forms of transmission.
One model for reviving dying languages focuses on immersing children and their parents within the Maori culture.
Previously untold stories are now being heard in Bolivia, often in languages once excluded from public discourse.
For one indigenous people, the internet could be key to saving a language related to no other on earth.
Many Mayans complain of feeling like foreigners in their own land – a sentiment compounded by the dominance of Spanish.
Australia, which was once home to 200 languages, now suffers from the highest rate of language extinction in the world.