Vi Hilbert - a Washington Living Treasure

 Vi Hilbert has also had an impact on Seattle University. There is a native garden dedicated in her honor at the south end of campus by the library.  Here are links to the Seattle University Newsletter. Welcome to Seattle University’s taqwsheblu Vi Hilbert Ethnobotanical Garden!


Vi Hilbert, revered Upper Skagit elder who preserved her native language, dies at age 90 

An author, teacher and linguist, Vi Hilbert and her passion transformed the language into a legacy. The revered Upper Skagit elder died of natural causes Friday, Dec. 19, at her home in La Conner. She was 90.  View article.


Vi Hilbert
Vi Hilbert is an Upper Skagit elder who's dedicated most of her life to preserving Lushootseed language and culture.

Jimi Lott / The Seattle Times
Hilbert, who will turn 83 this summer, was named a Washington Living Treasure in 1989. For 15 years, she taught Lushootseed language and literature to hundreds of University of Washington students and was instrumental in publishing the first Lushootseed dictionary. "There's no Lushootseed word for 'love' and no word for 'can't'," said Hilbert, seated at the dining room table in her South Seattle home. Meaning in the language of the Coast Salish people, she says, centers around "the beauty of the land and honor our people felt for all things beautiful."
In July, Hilbert will release her latest book on Seattle-area place names that she co-authored with an anthropologist and a number of her students.
Audio Clips
Lady Louse Cleans House
Told by Elizabeth Krise to Thomas Hess. Tulalip, 1962
Lady Louse lived there in that great big house!
All alone.
She had no friends or relatives.
Then she took it.
And she swept it.
That great big house.
There was lots of dirt!
When she got to the very middle of the house,
she got lost!
That was the end of Lady Louse!
That is the end.

Listen to the story in English and Lushootseed, as spoken by Vi Hilbert:
WAV format
MP3 format



Phrases
"To the first people - this land is sacred. This land is sacred to the first people!"
Listen to the phrase in English and Lushootseed, as spoken by Vi Hilbert:
WAV format
MP3 format


"Seeahth was an honorable leader - he was Duwamish and Suquamish. The town of Seattle has been named for him. His name has been misspelled and mispronounced to be something other than Seeahth."
Listen to the phrase in English and Lushootseed, as spoken by Vi Hilbert:
WAV format
MP3 format
Technical notes
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