Manoa Heritage Center receives $90K for Hawaiian language revitalization
U.S. Senator Brian Schatz, a member of the Senate Appropriations and Indian Affairs Committees, announced on August 10, 2017, that the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) will award $90,000 to the Mānoa Heritage Center in Honolulu through a new Native American language revitalization initiative. The funding, which will be matched dollar for dollar through a partnership with the First Nations Development Institute, will “support programs and initiatives that aim to preserve and revitalize Hawaiian language, history and culture.”
“Language is fundamental to the identity of Native Hawaiians,” said Schatz. “This new funding will give us more resources to preserve the language and all aspects of the Native Hawaiian culture that help make our state so unique.”
According to its website, the Mānoa Heritage Center is a nonprofit organization that seeks to promote the thoughtful stewardship of the natural and cultural heritage of Hawaiʻi. This grant is part of NEH’s Creating Humanities Communities Grant Program which supports grassroots humanities programs by encouraging partnerships and collaborations between local entities.
In 2015, Senator Schatz authored the Native American Tourism and Improving Visitor Experience (NATIVE) Act to “enhance and integrate native tourism, empower native communities, and expand unique cultural tourism opportunities in the United States.” A component of this legislation, which was signed into law last year, directed federal dollars towards indigenous language preservation.