Creating Community to Reclaim Indigenous Language with Lizette B. Suxo Lagos

Season 2,   Jun 13, 2023, 05:00 AM

Dr. Lizette B. Suxo (Sooks-so) shared her journey to connect with her Andean culture and learn Aymara, an indigenous language from the region. Like many people trying to learn their indigenous heritage language, she had to dig deep to find resources, which inspired her to create a hub for people looking to connect with their Andean culture.

Dr. Lizette B. Suxo is an accomplished leadership coach. With over 2 decades of leadership in education, Lizette made a pivot in her career when she became a mom. Faced with important language learning decisions with regard to her son, and also in light of a recent rare disease diagnosis, the importance of raising her son as a multilingual global citizen quickly became a top priority. As a traveler of the world, Lizette has often worked to craft bridges between individuals and across communities. Learning the indigenous language of her ancestors has been a parallel learning experience for her as she raises a son who is bilingual and an emerging multilingual learner. After years of leading and learning in schools and school systems in the US and Latin America, Lizette is deeply interested in strengthening her connection to her cultural Andean roots by learning Aymara. While her family has spoken Aymara for centuries, their immigration to the US and Europe has resulted in a generation who does not speak it. Lizette aims to learn Aymara to ensure it does not disappear from her family and, as her teacher- or yatichiri - has said, “to learn our language is the preserve the ways in which our ancestors lived in the world. How they saw, felt, and experienced the world. How they made sense of it. If we lose our language, we lose that important vision and perspective.” Lizette is determined to strengthen her knowledge of Aymara so that she can build this connection with her mom (a native speaker) and her son, too.

The Ayllu is an online virtual Adinx community for those looking to connect with Aymara and Quechua resources and people in the U.S. and abroad). Their website will go live on June 21st, which is the Aymara New Year or Wilkakuti (the 'Return of the Sun,' in Aymara)

IG: @the_ayllu

Aymara language resources (Lizette's 'yatichiri's (teacher's) page)

FB: https://www.facebook.com/aymaryatiqana

IG: @elis.ajata.rivera

Quechua community resources IG: @quechuaproject

UNESCO article on Aymara: https://courier.unesco.org/en/articles/aymara-has-not-said-its-last-word