Don Maki, the Ktunaxa Nation's director of traditional knowledge and language, began documenting the Ktunaxa language in 1999.
"We knew right away, that we would have to come up with a solution to overcome the barrier of having Ktunaxa Nation communities so spread out that it made fact-to-face training difficult," he says.
The Ktunaxa have been digitally archiving their traditional language for the past six years, but their slow dial-up connections limited their ability to use the information for practical purposes.
"With no prospect of the infrastructure in our traditional territory improving, we took it upon ourselves to develop our own broadband network in order to make use of these important language-training resources," says Maki.
In March of 2007, the mission was accomplished. The Ktunaxa Nation now has North America's only native-owned open-fiber-to-the-home network, providing speeds of 100 megabits per second to each home.
"We're now wired like no other community in North America. Everything we do is based on connectivity. Not many people get a chance to change the course of predicted history, but with hard work and fiber, we will," Maki says.
[Photo: Kajsa Linnarsson]
































