Daniel Everett
July 26, 2012
On this date in 1951, linguist
Daniel Everett was born in
Holtville, Calif., to a working-class family. A voracious reader,
Everett became interested in linguistics after viewing "My Fair Lady" as
a high schooler. He met Keren Graham, the daughter of Christian
missionaries, in high school and, at 17, became a born-again Christian. A
year later, he and Keren married. After graduating from the Moody Bible
Institute of Chicago in 1975, they both enrolled in an international
evangelical organization, the Summer Institute of Linguistics (S.I.L.),
with the mission of "spreading the Word of God" by translating the bible
into the languages of preliterate societies. Everett was chosen to work
with the Piraha, a small tribe of about 350 people in the jungles of
Brazil. S.I.L. had sent prior missionaries to this tribe before, but due
to the complexity of the Piraha language, none had succeeded in
mastering it. Among other challenges, it is a language that is as likely
to be hummed or whistled, as it is to be spoken. Keren, Everett and
their three young children were sent to the Piraha village at the mouth
of Maici River. The Piraha have resisted all efforts from outside
influences, steadfastly maintaining their own culture. The preliterate
Piraha live and speak in the present and "shun outsiders' knowledge,"
Everett said (The New Yorker, April 2007). Everett's conclusion that the
Piraha language lacks grammatical recursion (sentences embedded within
sentences, a concept promoted by foremost linguist
Noam Chomsky,
and considered a cornerstone of language) has created controversy in
the field of modern linguistics. Everett discovered the Piraha have no
creation myths; they don't draw pictures or make up stories about the
ancient past. They believe in spirits, with which they may have a direct
encounter, but "there's no great god who created all the spirits,"
Everett noted (Science News, Dec. 2005).
The Piraha consistently responded to missionary stories about Jesus
Christ by asking, "Have you met this man?" Everett said: "They lived so
well without religion and they were so happy. Also they didn't believe
what I was saying because I didn't have evidence for it . . . I began to
think: what am I doing here, giving them these 2000-year-old concepts
when everything of value I can think of to communicate to them they
already have?" (New Scientist, Jan. 19, 2008). Influenced by the
Piraha's way of seeing the world, Everett eventually lost his faith and
became an atheist. It took 19 years before he told his wife and, when he
did, their marriage ended and two of his three children disassociated
themselves from him. Daniel Everett serves as chair of linguistics,
languages and cultures at Illinois State University at Normal. His
book,
Don't Sleep, There Are Snakes: A Life in the Amazon, was published by Random House in 2008.
“I went from being a Christian missionary to an atheist.”
—
Daniel Everett, Interview, New Scientist, Jan. 18, 2008
Jane Esbensen (FFRF)
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