2011-04-15

Berard Haile

Berard Haile

Berard Haile (1874-1961) O.F.M. was a Franciscan friar who was one of the foremost authorities on Navajo anthropology. He helped devise a written alphabet of the Navajo language and published a four volume work on learning Navajo. In 1929 Father Berard attended the Catholic University of America and obtained a Master's Degree. He then accepted the position of Research Asssociate in Anthropology at the University of Chicago. He made a field trip with Dr. Sapir through Navajo Land that was sponsored by the Laboratory of Anthropology at Santa Fe, New Mexico. Fr. Berard devised a new Najao alphabet containing over sixty characters. His other major work dealt with the creation story of the Navajo, .

Haile was awarded a Doctor of Letters degree from St. Bonaventure University in 1951, and a Doctor of Laws degree in 1952 from the University of New Mexico. In 1953 the Navajo Tribal Council passed a resolution which read in part: "Father Berard Haile has spent his life among the Navajo people learning to know and understand us and our religion, and has, more than any other living non-Indian, through close contact with Navajos and the medicine men of our tribe and by his indefatigable labor, reduced our language to written form and succeeded in preserving for future generations the knowledge of the Navajo history and religion."

References






Retrieved from : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berard_Haile