Liqʼwala
| Liqʼwala | |
|---|---|
| Liq̓ʷala | |
| Native to | Canada | 
| Region | British Columbia | 
| Ethnicity | Laich-kwil-tach | 
| Native speakers | 12 (2017) | 
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | – | 
| Glottolog | None | 
| Laich-kwil-tach territory | |
Liqʼwala (also rendered Liq̓ʷala and Lik'wala) is an endangered dialect of Kwakʼwala spoken by the Laich-kwil-tach people of Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
In 2017, according to Laurie Lewis of the Liqʼwala Language Revitalization Committee, only 12 individuals, all over 70, were fluent Liqʼwala speakers. The Campbell River Mirror reported in 2017 that an attempt would be made to teach the dialect through a Liqʼwala language immersion pilot program:
Lewis says they already have a mentor-apprentice program where a fluent elder works one-on-one with a qualified teacher for 300 hours, and between that elder and teacher, she is confident they could create a three-year pilot program that would provide a full immersion program. “We just want three years to make some fluent speakers so we can save our language,” Lewis says, “and I want to have the conversation about how we can do that. We believe we can do it.”