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Indigenous languages were sites of conflict, too. Starting in the late nineteenth century, reformers pushed tens of thousands of Native American children into white-run boarding schools. There, cut off from their families and communities, the students studied English. “We shall break up all the Indian there is in them in a very short time,” promised the founder of one such school. Students caught speaking indigenous languages were routinely beaten or had their mouths washed with soap and lye.
How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States
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