8 FLUENT CHEROKEE SPEAKERS DIE EVERY MONTH. THEN ONE SPOKE THEIR LANGUAGE IN FRONT OF 26 MILLION VIEWERS. At the 90th Academy Awards, Wes Studi walked out as the first Native American presenter in Oscar history. He talked about serving 12 months in Vietnam with Alpha Company. Then he looked at the Hollywood crowd and asked, “Anyone else?” Dead silence. But what happened next is what no one was ready for. Out of 376,000 Cherokee people, only around 2,100 still speak the language. For generations, Native children were beaten in boarding schools for saying a single word in their mother tongue. The government wanted those languages to disappear completely. And right there, on that stage, Wes Studi spoke Cherokee. No hesitation. No permission. He thanked veterans and Cherokee people who served — in the exact language they tried to erase. A year later, the Tri-Council of Cherokee tribes declared a state of emergency for the language. Eight fluent speakers still die every month. But that night, millions of people heard Cherokee — and it sounded like something that refuses to die.
When Wes Studi Spoke Cherokee at the Oscars, the Language Refused to Disappear At the 90th Academy Awards, the room…