NORTON META TAG

15 June 2026

The Man Who Created a Written Language for the Cherokee Did It So Efficiently and Elegantly, His Peers Thought It Was Magic 12JUN26


 FASCINATING. I love that this article proves again the Native Americans / First Nations who lived throughout the continent and the Caribbean were and are not ignorant people. Sequoyah is proof of how wrong the White invaders were. The problem for the Europeans who invaded, conquered, committed physical and cultural genocide and stole the lands of the Native Americans / First Nations was and still is for some is they are not White. The neo-nazi fascist drumpf/trump-vance administration and the gop / guardians of  prejudice-republican party are boosting this ignorance, cutting funding of federal programs for Native Americans and in the bans of visitors and immigrants from Brown and Black countries while encouraging immigration of White pro-apartheid South Africans. This is all America, past and present, and this article is from Smithsonian Magazine...

The Man Who Created a Written Language for the Cherokee Did It So Efficiently and Elegantly, His Peers Thought It Was Magic


Illustration by Mer Young

At first, they laughed. Then they scoffed. Finally, they accused him of witchcraft. The Cherokee silversmith named Sequoyah had spent years scratching strange marks on paper. In 1821, his fellow tribespeople, disturbed by his obsession, put him on trial for practicing black magic. Sequoyah insisted his invention would allow Cherokee speakers to write out Iroquoian language for the first time. To test his claim, tribal elders ordered Sequoyah’s young daughter, Ayoka, to another room. Father and daughter separately made marks on paper and told their minders in each room what the marks said. Then the papers were exchanged. When each was able to read the other’s messages aloud, suspicion turned to wonder.

The astonished elders immediately asked him to teach them his revolutionary transcription method. Within six months, one in four Cherokee, or Tsalagi, could read and write. Within a quarter-century, Cherokee people had achieved a higher rate of literacy than the country’s non-Native population.

The unprecedented development came after years of work by a man whose name means “pig’s foot,” perhaps a reference to his pronounced limp. Born in 1770s Tennessee to a Cherokee mother and a white father, Sequoyah was raised in his mother’s culture and didn’t read or write English. During the War of 1812, he served alongside American soldiers, sometimes using the English name George Guess. The experience likely exposed him to written language, or what he called “talking leaves.” 

After the war, Sequoyah moved to Alabama and began experimenting with an ideogrammic approach to written Cherokee, in which each word was a symbol, but he abandoned that as cumbersome and too difficult to learn. Eventually, he hit on 86 syllables that expressed specific sounds, each syllable represented by symbols borrowed from Greek, Hebrew and English. Later reduced to 85 symbols, Sequoyah’s syllabary was not simply a creative triumph, but a new means of self-government and cultural memory: By 1827, the Cherokee had a written constitution, and everything from hunting guidance to sacred chants could be recorded for posterity. The Cherokee Phoenix, the first Native newspaper in the United States, rolled off the press in 1828 using his symbols. Others followed. 

The syllabary was widely lauded, as its phonetic accuracy and simplicity made it far easier to grasp than English. “The superiority of Guess’ alphabet is manifest, and has been fully proved by experience,” wrote Albert Gallatin, a U.S. Treasury secretary, diplomat and linguist, in 1836. “The boy learns in a few weeks that which occupies two years of the time of ours.” Yet sudden mass literacy didn’t curb the U.S. government’s growing appetite for Cherokee homelands in North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee. Soon after Gallatin made his comments, the government forced tens of thousands of Cherokee to migrate along the Trail of Tears to a territory now called Oklahoma.

Despite this tragedy, the Cherokee carried the syllabary to their new home and maybe even across the Atlantic. In Liberia, a Cherokee named Austin Curtis, who married into the Indigenous Vai community, is said to have used the syllabary to devise a script for the Vai, which went on to inspire written works throughout West Africa. Sequoyah himself moved to Mexico, where he died in 1843.

Today, with only a few thousand Cherokee fluent in their ancestors’ tongue, the syllabary is a key tool in safeguarding Tsalagi culture. Teenagers use it to text one another; children’s books use it to convey traditional tales; and official documents and road signs communicate in the mode Sequoyah invented—moving reminders of how a single individual’s brilliance and tenacity can change the world. 

Did you know? Where did Sequoyah go?

It's unclear why Sequoyah left for Mexico when he was 80 years old, in 1842, but according to an expert with the Cherokee National History Museum, he may have been in search of his fellow Cherokee who had settled there.

Even prior to their forced removal from the southeastern United States, many Cherokee resettled in the early 19th century in East Texas, which at the time was under Spanish rule. After Mexican independence and the later fight for Texan independence, these Cherokee lost contact with their countrymen. 
Over the years, many attempts have been made to find Sequoyah's gravesite, but none have been successful.

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LIFE'S LITTLE MYSTERIES: Has all the water on Earth been peed before? & Making wastewater drinkable is a growing trend as water resources become more strained 13JUN&11MAR26

Was your water once peed out by an animal?
(Image credit: Monica Murphy via Getty Images)

 HERE in Virginia, Maryland and D.C., depending on where you are, we are experiencing moderate, severe and extreme drought conditions for the second year running. It looks like 3/4ths of the country is experiencing some sort of drought per the U.S. Drought Monitor Map as of  9 JUNE 26. A lot of these areas have been experiencing drought for 3, 4, and 5+ years. Some cities are considering recycling their sewer water back into their drinking water systems. One American city has. That just gives a lot of people the heebie-geebies and they don't believe it can be done safely. The article from NPR (have you donated to NPR and PBS since drumpf/trump and the gop / greed over people-republican party controlled congress stopped federal funding for them?) is about how this is already happening in Altamonte Springs, Florida. And the article from Live Science discusses if all the water on Earth has been peed at least once or not.....

Has all the water on Earth been peed before?


Water, water, everywhere … has all of it been peed out at least once?

13 June 2026

As water molecules move around the planet through the water cycle, they take on many forms, moving from solid to liquid to gas and back again. They can make up snowpacks melting in the spring, a river rushing to the ocean, clouds carried on sea breezes, and even pee flushed down the toilet.

But with this complex cycle of evaporation, condensation and precipitation continuing over and over, has the water coming out of your faucet been inside a dinosaur or a mammoth at some point? And does that mean all the water on Earth has been peed before?

Pee is one of many stages that make up the water cycle.

(Image credit: Vicki Jauron, Babylon and Beyond Photography via Getty Images)

Making wastewater drinkable is a growing trend as water resources become more strained

AILSA CHANG, HOST:

The country's water supply is coming under increasing strain. But as groundwater resources dwindle, another water supply strategy is gaining momentum. Molly Duerig with Central Florida Public Media in Orlando reports on the rise of recycled water, meaning recycled treated wastewater - that's right, for drinking.

(SOUNDBITE OF SPRINKLER SPRAYING)

MOLLY DUERIG, BYLINE: The idea of reusing treated wastewater is nothing new. Here in Florida, more than 300 million gallons a day gets used to irrigate people's lawns.

(SOUNDBITE OF WATER BUBBLING)

DUERIG: What's newer is an idea that's growing, and for some, much harder to digest - drinking treated wastewater.

FRANK MARTZ: It's really just recycled water.

DUERIG: That's Frank Martz, city manager at Altamonte Springs, just about 10 miles north of Orlando.

MARTZ: You know, 40 years ago, 30 years ago, 20 years ago, just the notion of taking stormwater and sewage and turning it into drinking water sounded ridiculous to many and scary to many.

DUERIG: And here at the city's pilot facility, I'm about to try some. There's no sink here, so Martz turns a knob on one of the pipes and out flows the water, clear and odorless.

(SOUNDBITE OF WATER SPLASHING)

DUERIG: It's water. I'm about to drink. Yeah, it tastes completely normal.

If you hadn't told me this was recycled wastewater, I wouldn't have known. Since I do know where this water ultimately comes from, drinking it still feels a little strange. But Martz plus many water engineers and scientists say it's perfectly safe.

MARTZ: It is chemically clean. It is biologically clean.

DUERIG: Florida is now one of four U.S. states where regulations allow for recycled wastewater to be treated and distributed for drinking, what's called direct potable reuse. The others are Arizona, California and Colorado, where similar pilot projects are underway. Bruno Pigott, a former senior official with the Environmental Protection Agency, now heads up the WateReuse Association, a trade group that lobbies for using what they call recycled water, including for drinking.

BRUNO PIGOTT: It's easy for me to say I'm excited about it. But I've got to make sure that the public is understanding it, that it's pure and safe, and understands the complex nature of water and that every drop of water's been used before.

DUERIG: Pigott says it's a challenge, but he's confident drinking treated wastewater will only keep growing in the U.S.

PIGOTT: It's spreading across the country.

DUERIG: And in Florida, rapid growth is driving the state to encourage it. There are skeptics, though, like Daytona Beach resident Greg Gimbert. He's been mobilizing people against direct potable reuse. Here's Gimbert speaking at a recent county council meeting.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

GREG GIMBERT: Today, you should put forward a version of our ban on toilet-to-tap.

DUERIG: Critics call it toilet-to-tap. In reality, this water goes through many steps of treatment after the toilet before people can drink it. Gimbert says he still doesn't trust the process and sees it as a ploy to allow for Florida's unlimited growth.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

GIMBERT: Maybe cut back on new development until you can cut over to a safe water supply.

DUERIG: Back in Altamonte Springs, Frank Martz says the technology here is the way of the future.

MARTZ: The water itself is ready. The question is, are the users ready?

DUERIG: Maybe not quite yet. These treatment plants are costly, and it will take a while for local utilities to build them.

For NPR News, I'm Molly Duerig in Orlando.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

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