Today’s story takes us to western North Carolina, where the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians is working to preserve the Cherokee language. Their dialect of Cherokee is considered “severely endangered” by UNESCO. To help revitalize the language, community leaders opened the New Kituwah Academy in 2004. It’s a Cherokee language immersion school for elementary-age students. A partnership with a print-making instructor at Western Carolina University is bringing beautiful, hand-printed classroom materials to the Cherokee language learners.