📚 Wai Wai educators and the making of a community-based grammar
The Wai Wai are an Indigenous people of the Karib language family who live in the Wayamu Territory—across parts of northern Brazil, as well as neighboring regions of Guyana and Suriname. Their history includes forced displacements, interethnic contact, and continued resistance to external pressures.
Since the 1970s, the Wai Wai have returned to ancestral lands in Brazil, establishing villages like Mapuera and Jatapuzinho. Through their own association (APIW), they defend territorial rights and lead initiatives grounded in cultural and linguistic autonomy.
One such initiative is the creation of a school grammar written in the Wai Wai language by Wai Wai teachers. Based on oral histories and actual language use, this grammar was developed collectively between 2014 and 2019 in training workshops and educational gatherings.
The process is documented in the article:
“Wai Wai Pedagogical Grammar: reflections and methodological practices on developing didactic material for an Indigenous community”.
The publication highlights how education becomes a tool of resistance—connecting language, memory, and self-determination.
🪶 Read the full article:
👉 https://doi.org/10.25189/2675-4916.2025.v6.n3.id810
#IndigenousLanguages #LanguageDocumentation #WaiWai #LinguisticJustice #OpenAccess #DecolonizingEducation
