not many people speak hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ (pronounced hun’-q’um-ee’-num’), the language of the
musqueam nation, fluently these days.
colonial policies almost extinguished the language.
“i had been conditioned to think that our language and our culture are primitive and that we should cast them aside,” said victor guerin, a musqueam linguist who grew up in the era of residential schools.
šx?w?q?????t crosstown elementary school in vancouver, b.c. june 17, 2025.
arlen redekop
/
png
various efforts are underway to try to preserve the language, including incorporating it into public spaces.
on june 20, vancouver city officials and members of the musqueam indian band gathered in kitsilano for the official renaming of trutch street as
Šxʷməθkʷəy̓əmasəm (sh-xw-muth-qwee-um-awe-sum) street, also known as musqueamview in english. it was the first street sign in the city to undergo such a change.
it joined a number of plazas, buildings and other locations in vancouver that have received official hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓ names.
guerin, who has spent decades learning, teaching and trying to revitalize hən̓q̓əmin̓əm̓, said renaming the street was a small but important step in the process of reconciliation.
“this is very important for our people to raise their own self-esteem back to where it was in the 10,000 years previous to this,” he said.
sθәqәlxenәm, also known as rainbow park, at smithe and richards streets in vancouver, b.c.
arlen redekop
/
png