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Language App: Barkindji

Mr. Thompson laughed, a rusty gate swinging open. “I know. She explained. Then she hugged me.”

Aunty Meryl shook her head slowly. “No. That’s the old way. Whitefella way. Put words in boxes, people forget to speak them.” She reached into her worn canvas bag and pulled out a cassette tape, the label faded to illegibility. “This is your great-uncle Paddy, 1982. Last fluent speaker before he passed. We got ninety minutes of him telling stories, naming trees, singing the river.”

For three months, they worked. Jasmine recorded Aunty Meryl speaking syllables— thampu (fish), palku (water), ngurrambaa (home). Koda matched each to images of the Darling River, red cliffs, and pelicans. Levi built a feature where users could record themselves and get a “soundwave match” to Uncle Paddy’s old voice. barkindji language app

Within a week, Aunty Meryl’s phone wouldn’t stop buzzing. A grandmother in Menindee had recorded herself saying ngatyi (hello) to her newborn grandson. A fourteen-year-old in Bourke posted a video of herself naming the stars— wurruwari , pintari , yirramu —words no Barkindji child had spoken aloud in forty years.

He scrolled to a new comment left on the tutorial page. It was from Aunty Meryl. She explained

“It’s not like English,” Aunty Meryl sighed. “You don’t just swap nouns. You feel where you are. If you’re standing in the river, you say one verb. If you’re beside it, another. If you’re walking toward water, a whole different word.”

The teens—Jasmine, 16, her cousin Koda, 15, and his friend Levi—had been recruited because they were the only young people in Wilcannia who could code. And because Aunty Meryl had threatened to tell their grandmothers they’d refused. That’s the old way

In the dusty back room of the Broken Hill Regional Library, 72-year-old Aunty Meryl sat before a laptop, her gnarled fingers hovering over the keyboard. Around her, three teenagers slumped in their chairs, scrolling through phones.

They launched the app on New Year’s Eve, not with a press release, but with a barbecue by the river. The kids from town downloaded it immediately. So did teachers, nurses, and even the whitefella cop who’d learned to say yitha yitha (slowly, slowly).