Whakahohehia to Kaute KOREUTU!

Ko ta maatau whare pikitia me to wharepukapuka whakaataata ka taea noa te rere, te tango mai ranei ma nga mema anake

Me matakitaki tonu mo te FREE ➞

He iti ake te waa 1 meneti ki te Haina Mai ka pai ai ki a koe te koa ki nga Kiriata Mutunga & Taitara TV.

00:00:00 / 00:25:00
4591 Watching Now

Gyani Maiya (2019)

1 /1

“We left our language and started speaking others’. The girls have got married and have left for the villages. Boys are getting married in villages. It should be taught to children”. — Gyani Maiya Sen-Kusunda The Gi Mihaq (also known as Kusunda) was a semi-nomadic hunter and gatherer community that settled in villages around the mid-western Nepalese district of Dang. They have long lost their native language Mihaq (Kusunda), to acculturation and other barriers to active use. The community also lost their 83-year-old elder Gyani Maiya Sen-Kusunda in 2020, the most and the only known fluent Kusunda speaker then. Filmed in Kulmor in the Dang District in 2018, this openly-licensed documentary is a memoir of Sen-Kusunda in her own words and a biography of her people who were forced to leave their language and cultural identity. Kusunda is being revived by Kamala Sen Khatri, Sen-Kusunda’s younger sister, and Uday Raj Aaley, a local researcher who is the key interviewer for this film.