The Quechua language returned to Cornell’s curriculum this fall after a 15-year hiatus, thanks to a group of students who organized to bring it back and an instructor who traveled to Ithaca from her home in the Andean highlands of Ecuador.
“It feels so, so good to hear people speaking my native language far away from home,” said Soledad Chango, whose native language is Kichwa – part of the Quechua language family spoken in Ecuador.
Quechua is the most widely spoken Indigenous language in the Americas. Yet, because it is primarily an informal, spoken language, it is harder to teach and pass down through generations.
Chango is teaching beginning at Cornell as she pursues graduate studies in pedagogy and linguistics, with support from a Fulbright Foreign Language Teaching Assistant fellowship. The (LACS), part of the , applied to the same grant program to add Quechua instruction to Cornell’s curriculum and is hosting Chango during her year in Ithaca.
In the 1950s, linguistics professor Donald F. Solá (鶹Ƶ and 鶹Ƶ) introduced Cornellians to the language, but after his retirement, Quechua disappeared as a course offering – until a group of students organized in 2020 to help bring it back.
“Many of us have parents, grandparents and other family who speak Quechua,” said Vanessa Olguín ’22, president of Contigo Perú, a student organization promoting Peruvian culture on campus. “We wanted the opportunity to learn the language at Cornell.”
Contigo Perú built a list of interested students to demonstrate demand for Quechua and support LACS’ grant application. Now Olguín is enrolled in Chango’s class, along with 13 classmates – most with strong personal and academic connections to the language.
“This is my language,” said Mayra Miranda ’23.
A classmate, , is a doctoral student in the field of anthropology planning fieldwork in the Andes. Now she is able to study the major language of the Inca empire at Cornell. Whittemore doesn’t mind the course’s 8 a.m. start time: “Everyone wants to be there,” she said.
Chango focuses the class on her Salasaca Indigenous culture, including traditions like Killa Raymi – a festival honoring the moon, seasons and femininity – which the class recently celebrated with a small gift for each student.
She is working with the (A&S) and Quechua instructors at peer institutions to develop her own course materials, since Quechua resources are not widely available.
On Indigenous Peoples Day, Chango joined LACS at Onondaga Community College, where she shared the Kichwa language and Andean culture. On the Oct. 27 episode of LRC’s podcast, , she reflected on the impact of teaching Indigenous languages.
“Soledad has brought tremendous energy and enthusiasm to the classroom and community,” said , LACS director and associate professor of history (A&S). “With all her hard work, she is helping LACS build a strong argument for teaching Quechua on a more permanent basis.”
LACS will apply for additional funding next year, Bassi said, to keep Quechua instruction at Cornell.
Cornell offers instruction in 57 languages through A&S, including less commonly taught languages like Urdu and Burmese, with support and expertise from Einaudi Center area studies programs. Cornell students can to become fluent in a language of South or Southeast Asia.
“I hope to strengthen the language in my own culture,” Chango said. When she returns to Ecuador next year, she plans to teach Kichwa to her community members and encourage the language’s development and retention in Ecuador and beyond.
Colleges nationwide celebrate International Education Week this week, Nov. 15–19, with a focus on language learning and international study and research experiences.
Learn about opportunities to explore Europe , 11-2 in Duffield Hall atrium.
Lia Sokol ’23 is a writing intern for Global Cornell.