@Wikitongues
  @Wikitongues
Wikitongues | Pascual speaking Sakapulteko and Spanish | Mayan peoples | WIKITONGUES @Wikitongues | Uploaded April 2020 | Updated October 2024, 3 hours ago.
Pascual Sol fights for the languages of Mayan peoples as president of the Mayan Language Academy of Guatemala.

This video is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International license. To download a copy, please contact hello@wikitongues.org.

This video was recorded by Daniel Bögre Udell in Cusco, Peru at the Regional Congress of Indigenous Languages for Latin America and the Caribbean. The Sakapultek language, also known as Sakapulteko, is spoken by about 15,000 speakers in Guatemala, mostly in El Quiché department, as well as in Guatemala City. It is a Mayan language, part of the Greater Quiché branch thereof, and is closely related to the K’iche’ language.

While many, even young parents, still speak Sakapulteko, transmission to younger generations is limited, with most becoming monolingual in Spanish. Literacy among native speakers is below 1%, but a promising 16% of L2 learners are literate in the language as well.

Help us caption & translate this video!

amara.org/v/C0lPD
Pascual speaking Sakapulteko and Spanish | Mayan peoples | WIKITONGUESWIKITONGUES: Faraz speaking Majhi PunjabiBahasa Indonesia, an Austronesian language | Pualam Abadi speaking Indonesian | WikitonguesMusic in Language Diversity | Conversation and music with Call Me Córdoba | WikitonguesJamal speaking Tachelhit | Berber language (Berbers) | WikitonguesThe Tigrinya language, casually spoken | Michael and Sennite speaking Tigrinya | WikitonguesWIKITONGUES: Jakob speaking Zipser GermanThe Kildin Sámi and Russian languages, casually spoken | WikitonguesBonaventure speaking Murrinhpatha | Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders | WikitonguesListen to the Khmer language of Cambodia | Chantara speaking Khmer | WikitonguesKarina speaking Yankunytjatjara | Aboriginal Australians and Torres Strait Islanders | WikitonguesJuan Carlos speaking Santiagueño Quichua and Spanish | Quechuan languages | Wikitongues

Pascual speaking Sakapulteko and Spanish | Mayan peoples | WIKITONGUES @Wikitongues

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER