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Daniel HONORE
Alain ANSELIN
Jacques COURSIL

A REPORT ON THE CREOLES OF AMAPA

By Stan Anonby
A REPORT ON THE CREOLES OF AMAPA

Le créole à base lexicale française est parlé par environ 30.000 Amérindiens brésiliens dans l'état de l'Amapa, état frontalier de la Guyane française : Karipuna, Galibi, Palikur et autres. Ces autochtones ont abandonné leur langue originelle pour une variété de créole très proche du créole guyanais il y a environ un siècle, comme l'explique l'article ci-après :

Contents
Abstract
Introduction
2.0 Geographic location of Creole speech communities Amapá
3.0 Previous scholarship
3.1 Karipuna
3.2 Galibi Marworno
4.0 History of people
4.1 Karipuna
4.2 Galibi Marworno
4.3 Palikur
4.4 Galibi do Oiapoque
5.0 Social factors relevant to the sociolinguistic environment
5.1 Economics
5.2 Population distribution
5.3 Politics
5.4 Education
5.5 Immigration/Emigration
6.0 Linguistics
6.1 Lexicography
6.2 Regional differences in Creole
6.3 Literary development
7.0 Social Relations
7.1 Interaction with Portuguese Speakers
8.0 Bilingualism
9.0 Language vitality
10.0 Anthropological observations
11.0 Recommendations
11.1 Amapá French Creole (AFC)
11.2 Guianese Creole (FGFC)
Appendix A: Transcriptions of John 1:43–51 in St. Lucian, FGCF, and KFC
Appendix B: Questions from John 1:43–51
Appendix C: Responses to Questions from John 1:43–51
References

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Abstract
There are several varieties of French Creole. This report will focus mainly on those
spoken in northern Amapá, Brazil that are usually referred to as Karipuna French Creole.
The history of the four people groups in this area is heavily linked to France, and there is
still a lot of migration back and forth from French Guiana. The Brazilian groups this
paper deals with are the Karipuna (population 1,726), Galibi Marworno (population
1,787), Palikur (population 1,499), and Galibi do Oiapoque (population 30). The regional
differences in Creole do not pose a serious barrier to comprehension. Most of the
education is in Portuguese and almost everyone is bilingual in that language.
Two other creoles were looked at, Amapá Creole and French Guianese Creole. Amapá
Creole was found to be nonexistent.
Introduction
From March 28 to April 7, 2003, a team from SIL and the University of the West Indies
visited an area on both sides of the border between northern Brazil and French Guiana.
The primary purpose of this study was to investigate sociolinguistic aspects of the
French-lexifier Creole languages spoken in the state of Amapá. During this study, we
visited the Karipuna village of Manga, the capital city of Macapa and its environs, a
Karipuna village called Kunana and a neighboring Galibi village named Uaha, and parts
of French Guiana.
For the purposes of this paper, we have used the terms FGCF, AFC, KFC, and GFC,
1
but
many local people would not understand these distinctions. Although they acknowledged
there were minor differences of pronunciation and word choices in different areas, most
used the term “Creole” as if there were one single language.
The area discussed in this report is the northeastern corner of Brazil and the northern
point of the state of Amapá. Specifically, we will look at an area bordered roughly by
three sides. Two are rivers which empty into the Oiapoque Bay; the Oiapoque River,
which flows northeast and forms the border with French Guiana; and the Uaçá River,
which flows northwest. The third border is the Highway BR156, which connects the city
of Oiapoque with Macapa, the state capital.
1
FGCF = Guianese Creole; AFC = Amapá French Creole; KFC = Karipuna French Creole; GFC = Galibi
French Creole.

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2.0 Geographic location of Creole speech communities Amapá
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Brazil
Atlantic Ocean
Mouths
of the Amazon
SEE INSET
There are three Indian reserves in this area: Uaçá, Jumina, and Galibi; and four Indian
ethnic groups: Galibi Marworno, Karipuna, Galibi do Oiapoque, and Palikur. Of the three
Indian reserves, the Uaçá is by far the largest and most important. Many Indians speak
French Creole to varying degrees, but it is only the Karipuna and the Galibi Marworno
who speak it as their mother tongue. This paper will deal mainly with these two groups,
and their respective varieties will be called KFC and GFC.
The following describes a possible trip through the Indian villages of northern Amapá.
Beginning near the place where the headwaters of the Uaçá intersect the Highway
BR156, we have two small, relatively new Galibi Marworno villages, Tukay and
Samauma. About 45 kilometres down the Uaçá River, is the main, very large Galibi
Marworno village of Kumaruma.
Another 45 kilometres down the Uaçá River comes a tributary called the Urucaua River.
The Urucaua has nine Palikur Indian villages on its banks—Kumene (the main village),
Flecha, Tawary, Kamuywa, Kwikwit, Amomin, Puaytyeket, Urubu, and Mangue II. Near
where the Urucaua River meets Highway BR156 is the Palikur village of Ywauka. (There
are also Palikur villages in Cayenne and Saint Georges in French Guiana.)
Drifting downstream on the Uaçá River, about 25 kilometres from the mouth of the
Urucaua, we arrive at another tributary, the Curipi River. The Curipi has ten Karipuna
Indian villages on its banks—Espirito Santo (the main village of yesteryear), Manga (the

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main village today), Encruzo, Acaizal, Jondef, Tamima, Santa Isabel, Paxiubal, Zacarias,
and Japiim. On highway BR156, near the headwaters of the Curipi, are four more
Karipuna villages—Piquia, Curipi, Estrela, and Karia.

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We follow the Uaçá River 50 kilometres to its mouth in the Oiapoque Bay, and turn up
another river, the Oiapoque. About 25 kilometres up the Oiapoque, we come to a
tributary called the Jumina and an Indian reserve by the same name. Up the Jumina River
there are two villages. The first one, Uaha, is Galibi Marworno; the second, Kunana, is
Karipuna.
Continuing up the Oiapoque River, we come to two villages in the Galibi Indian reserve.
The first village, Ariramba, is Karipuna; the second, Galiby, is Galibi do Oiapoque.
These Galibi, part of a group that inhabits the north coast of South America all the way to
Venezuela, immigrated to Brazil in 1950. Outside of Brazil, this larger group is better
know as Carib.
3.0 Previous scholarship
3.1 Karipuna
Reference works on KFC include grammars by Joy Tobler (1983), Ruth Montserrat and
Rarcio Silva (1984), and Portuguese-KFC bilingual dictionaries by Alfred Tobler (1987)
and Francisca Picanco Montejo (1988). John Ladhams published a short article on the
sociohistorical background of Karipuna in 1995, and there is an earlier article on the
linguistic origins of Karipuna by Henri Wittman 1987. Other works with general
reference to Karipuna are John Holm 1988 and 1989 and Chris Corne 1999.
With regard to nonlinguistic materials, Expedito Arnaud (1969) and Candido Mariano da
Silva Rondon (1953) proved helpful in understanding the history and demography of the
Karipuna and other Amerindian groups of the Uaçá area. Antonella Tassinari has written
a doctoral thesis on Karipuna ethnography (1998).
3.2 Galibi Marworno
Sources on the Galibi go back to the 1600s. The Englishmen Keymis and Harcourt
passed through the Uaçá, and published reports in 1608, which mention the Carib,
Morrowinne, Wiapocoorie, and Yao Indians in that region. In 1893, Coudreau wrote up a
study of the Uaçá River. The information in this document deals principally with the
migrations of various ethnic groups, notably the Aruă migration, and the activities of the
Jesuits and their intentions to establish missions in the region of the Uaçá.
4.0 History of people
For over three centuries, the indigenous peoples of the northern region of Amapá traded
heavily with the French merchants (World Culture Encyclopedia 2007). After his visit in
1887, Coudreau wrote that everyone in the area understood the “Creole of Cayenne” (the
capital of French Guiana) (1893:33). Ladhams also notes, “in the late nineteenth century,
all Amerindians, except the Palikur, were fluent in Creole” (Ladhams, cited in Ferriera
1998:117).

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4.1 Karipuna
The people known today as the Karipuna are from many backgrounds: French Guianese,
St. Lucian Arab, Chinese, and various Indian groups. Four of the primary people who
make up the Karipuna will be discussed below.
One of the first recorded waves of immigrants came from the island of Trinidad. The
Carib-speaking Yao of Trinidad fled from the Spaniards at the beginning of the sixteenth
century and moved to the mouth of the Oyapoek River (Tassinari 1998:7).
Because of the Cabanagem Revolt in 1830, some Tupi-speaking Amerindians fled the
Breves Strait at the mouth of the Amazon. After a sojourn in French Guiana proper, they
moved to the Curipi River area.
A gold rush in 1854 caused many gold miners and would-be gold miners from various
origins (St. Lucian, Arab, Chinese, Brazilian, Guianese, and others) to move to the
Oiapoque and Curipi Rivers (Ladhams, cited in Ferreira 1998:12).
In 1887, Coudreau recorded that there were escaped Brazilian slaves (likely primarily of
African ancestry) living along the Curipi River (1893:25).
In 1927, da Silva Rondon, on a Brazilian government inspection trip in that frontier area,
officially calls the inhabitants of the Curipi River “Karipunas,” and the term has been
used ever since. Ten years later, these people were so mixed, there was some doubt as to
whether they could be considered Indians. In 1936, Luís Thomaz Reis, on another
inspection trip of the Brazilian frontier areas, affirms, “The Karipunas, even though they
are well dressed and clean, and are not ashamed to talk to us, are still Indians” (Reis
1936). By the 1930s, the Karipunas were the most educated and had come to be
considered the most “civilized” of the Indians in northern Amapá (Tassinari 1998:8).
Obviously, this area was multilingual due to contact between Indians speaking languages
from both Tupi and Carib families, FGFC speakers, Brazilian Portuguese speakers, and
others. Malcher makes note of the dominance of FGFC in the first half of the nineteenth
century. He explains that the Curipi River was close to Oiapoque, which was a stronghold
of Guianese culture (Malcher 1953:281–282). According to Ladhams’ research the
language of the Oiapoque area in the 1900s was either French or Creole (1998:13).
Ladhams summarizes, “since there was continuous contact with speakers of Guianese on
both sides of the Oiapoque River, FGFC, ‘was a prime candidate’ for the language choice
of the people living on the Curipi River” (Ladhams 1995:118, cited in Ferreira 1998:13).
Though spoken by both the Karipuna and the Galibi Marworno, the French Creole used
by Indians is referred to as Karipuna Creole, not Galibi Marworno Creole.
4.2 Galibi Marworno
The people now known as Galibi Marworno or Galibi de Uaçá are a product of ethnically
diverse populations: Aura, Marworno, Karipuna, Galibi, European, and African. Since

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the Indian element seems to be stronger among the inhabitants of the Uaçá River than the
Curipi River, only the three main Indian groups will be discussed below.
A large component of the present population was the Galibi, who in the first half of the
eighteenth century, were settled in Jesuit missions on the coast of French Guiana.
Nimendaju, who was on the Uaçá River in 1925, recorded more than 100 words in the
Galibi language (Vidal 2000).
The Arua came to live in the Uaça River region through a series of migrations. In the
seventeenth century, the Portuguese forced them from Marajo Island at the mouth of the
Amazon (Aryon Rodrigues 2000:18), and the Arua fled to French Guiana. In Guiana,
they were first enslaved by the French, then settled in Jesuit missions on the coast. With
the expulsion of the Jesuits from Guiana between 1765–68, a Portuguese offensive
invaded the ancient territories of missions, villages, and colonial settlements, imprisoning
the indigenous population and deporting the Indians back to the Amazon. The Arua
returned the next century and settled on the upper Uaçá (Vidal 2000). In the late 1800s,
Coudreau visited the area and observed the Arauas still spoke to each other in their own
language (Coudreau 1893, cited in Tassinari 1998:379). By 1925, however, Nimendaju
could only find a dozen words in the Arua language.
The Marworno (alternately called Maruae, Maraunu, or Maraon) were another of the
ancestral ethnic groups of the present population. The Marworno are likely as close as we
can get to the original people, as they are mentioned in reports from the sixteenth century
as inhabitants of the Uaçá region. In the eighteenth century, the Marworno were settled in
Jesuit missions on the coast, and their identity seems to have merged somewhat with the
Galibi and Arua who were together with them. Nimendaju, who was on the Uaçá River in
1925, was able to record only two words in Marworno (Vidal 2000).
In the late 1940s, the Brazilian government’s Indian Protection Service, through its
presence and activities, was instrumental in reinforcing a single indigenous identity for
the peoples of the region (World Culture Encyclopedia 2007). The primary element was
the building of a school, which helped concentrate almost all Galibi Marworno families
in the village of Kumaruma.
Galibi Marworno is a very recent self-designation, which has become fixed mainly in the
last decade. It has replaced the old GFC term mun Uaçá ‘people of the Uaçá’. “Galibi”
was the name given to the entire population of the Uaçá River by the Border Inspection
Commission and the Indian Protection Service. “Marworno” began to be used by the
neighboring Palikur and Karipuna, in order to represent their difference from the Galibi
of Oiapoque, who identify themselves with the Galibi population of the coast of Guiana.
By the late 1800s, FGFC became the dominant language among the Galibi Marworno, to
the detriment of the various languages spoken by their ancestors. In spite of the school’s
efforts to stamp it out, GFC has remained the mother tongue. GFC was thought to imply
Galibi Marworno use of French habits, which was not looked upon favourably by the
government—especially since they lived in a boundary area, which was hotly contested

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by the French and only definitively annexed to Brazil in 1900. In the late 1960s, a
Catholic organization called CIMI began writing primers and teaching GFC in the school.
Their efforts gave new incentive to use the GFC language, stimulating the Indians to
openly consider it as their maternal language (Vidal 2000).
4.3 Palikur
The inhabitants of the Urucaua River, the Palikur, have been mentioned in historical
accounts since 1513. Between 1930 and 1940, Black families arrived in the area from
French Guiana and their descendants assumed Palikur identity. Other than that, there was
very little mixture with other groups, and the Palikur were slow to change (World Culture
Encyclopedia 2007). In a 1936 inspection trip to the area, Reis noted that the Palikur
were more primitive, used less clothing, didn’t use firearms, and were afraid of being
captured as slaves (in Tassinari 1998).
Although bilingual in Creole, the Palikur in Brazil are proud they still speak their own
language. They feel speaking Palikur makes them “true Indians,” as opposed to the
Karipuna and Galibi Marworno, who speak Creole (Vidal 2000). In French Guiana, we
observed the young people do not speak Palikur, only FGCF and French.
4.4 Galibi do Oiapoque
This small group on the Oiapoque River emigrated from French Guiana in 1950. The
older people speak Galibi and Creole, but the younger ones speak only Portuguese (Vidal
2000).
5.0 Social factors relevant to the sociolinguistic environment
5.1 Economics
One of the ways the Indians make money is by selling their surplus manioc flour in
Oiapoque or in French Guiana. Another product that is popular with the French is their
artwork and bows and arrows.
There are government resources for projects in areas such as health and education. The
elderly Indians go to Oiapoque once a month to receive their retirement pensions, which
form a large percentage of the income of each village (Vidal 2000). Oiapoque is a central
city of 17,000, and the Indians must use Portuguese there in their transactions with other
Brazilians.

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5.2 Population distribution
Population of Karipuna Villages
Manga
465
Zacarias
32
Japiim
33
Paxiubal
44
Santa Isabel
262
Tamina
54
Espirito Santo
351
Jődef
64
Acaiza
91
Encruzo
25
Ariramba
62
Kunana
76
Piquia
19
Curipi
32
Karia
29
Estrela
87
Total Karipuna Population
1,726
Population of Galibi Marworno Villages
Kumaruma
1.578
Uaha
81
Samauma
58
Tukay
70
Total Galibi Marworno Population
1,787
Population of Palikur Villages
Kumene
572
Flecha
69
Tawary
44
Kamuywa
49
Kwikwit
29
Amomin
31
Puaytyeket
68
Urubu
42
Mangue II
46
Ywauka
49
Palikur Population in Brazil
999 (FUNAI 2001)
Palikur Population in French Guiana 500 (Queixalós 2000:299)
Total Palikur Population
1499
Galibi do Oiapoque Village
Total Galibi do Oiapoque Population30 (FUNAI 2001)

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5.3 Politics
The Palikur, Karipuna, Galibi Marworno. and Galibi-Oiapoque have been cooperating for
over a decade at various levels. Since 1990, the four groups have been in the habit of
gathering together for political assemblies in July. An example of cooperation was seen
in 1998, when the tribes took over the FUNAI (Department of Indian Affairs)
headquarters to protest the actions of the administrator (OESP, 23/04/98 in Povos
Indigenas 2000:392).
In 1992, the four groups formed a political association called Apoio. Both Creole and
Portuguese are used in the association meetings, but the amount of Creole is decreasing,
and the use of Portuguese is increasing. The first head of Apoio, Joăo Neves, was elected
in 1996 as mayor of the main city in the area, Oiapoque, a community of 17,000 people.
The present leader of Apoio, Vitoria Santos, is an orthodontist. Her main areas are getting
funding for education and health concerns of the Indian villages (Antionka Cpiberibe,
Oct/2000 in Povos Indigenas 2000:393).
5.4 Education
Karipuna
In Manga, we were told that they had school that taught all subjects in KFC and in
Portuguese. In fact, it is only the first three grades that use CIMI’s KFC literacy and
teaching materials. Claudio, an Indian of about 50, explained, “We have a bilingual
school so we won’t lose Creole. Otherwise, we will lose it.” Although they realize that
Portuguese is the ticket for socioeconomic advancement, they feel very good about KFC
education, because they value KFC as their own language.
Galibi Marworno
In 1934, a school was built in the Uaçá region, which had immediate consequences for
the population. To be closer to the school, the Galibi abandoned their islands on the upper
Uaçá and decided to live in a single village. Portuguese was taught in school and if the
students were caught using GFC, they were slapped with a paddle. It was only in the
1970s, after CIMI created some primers for the first three years of schooling, that GFC
was once again valued and began to be taught (Vidal 2000). CIMI still is involved in
education among the Galibi Marworno. We interviewed Suely, a Galibi Marworno
bilingual teacher who told us that CIMI trains teachers of Creole in Oiapoque. Expatriates
are in charge of the Portuguese portion of the education.
Some Galibi Marworno have achieved a high level of education. An example of this is
the present leader of the tribal council Apoio, who graduated from the University of Para
as an orthodontist. Of all the tribes, the Galibi Marworno speak the most Creole. Yet even
among them, their leaders and role models are highly educated in Portuguese. Clearly,
Portuguese is the prestige language, and is gaining ground among the Galibi Marworno
leadership.

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5.5 Immigration/Emigration
Karipuna
We heard of quite a number of Karipunas who lived in Cayenne, French Guiana. Claudio
counted sixteen from Manga alone. He himself had moved his family to Cayenne for
fifteen years. His daughter is married to a Chinese man and lives there today. It was
interesting that Claudio worried about the number of Karipunas mixing with people of
other colors. He and his wife concluded that although they have relatives in French
Guiana, they prefer living in Brazil, because it is more tranquil. They have some bad
memories of Cayenne, because Claudio’s wife became deathly ill there. It is also true that
Karipunas find it almost impossible to get French immigration papers.
Immigration to the city of Oiapoque is much more common. There is a street named
“Karipuna,” where many from this group have put down roots in town.
Galibi Marworno
We met Galibi Marworno who had worked in Guiana and concluded there were
similarities between their immigration patterns and those of the Karipuna. Vidal writes
that it was very common in the past for people from Kumaruma to work on the French
side as gold miners, construction workers, or in restaurants. He says many returned
because of their wives, who did not adapt to life far from the village, even becoming sick.
Many were sent back with the recent tightening of French immigration laws. Vidal
(2000) says, “The Indians no longer get special treatment, being considered simply
Brazilians, like so many others. Indians, who have stayed for from 8 to 15 years in
French Guiana, have had to go back because they had never been concerned to put their
citizenship and worker status in order.” Most of these returnees have expressed that there
are advantages to the slower pace of village living.
Many Galibi Marworno work and study in Oiapoque, where there is a street named after
them. We spoke with one lad, Jalis, who was studying to become a teacher. He said he
preferred Oiapoque to Kumaruma because you could get all the things you needed in
town.
6.0 Linguistics
6.1 Lexicography
Karipuna
Tobler says, “The Karipunas speak a dialect of the Guianese Creole (FGFC), but appear
to have retained some words of their original language (particularly in names of fauna
and flora), as well as incorporating some Portuguese words” (1983:10). Tobler infers that
their original language was that of the Tupi-speaking Indians, who moved to the area
from the mouth of the Amazon.

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Galibi Marworno
The Galibi Marworno have been speaking GFC for at least 100 years, though they still
retain some words dealing with flora and fauna, as well as some shamanic songs. When
we visited the village of Manga, Claudio, a Karipuna man, sang us a song in Galibi.
Claudio said he knew quite a few Galibi songs.
6.2 Regional differences in Creole
KFC is often treated as a variety of FGFC. Modern KFC, “it would seem, reflects today a
nineteenth century variety of Guianese Creole (FGFC)” (Corne 1985:234). The
differences appear to be in the areas of phonology and lexicon, with minor
morphosyntactic differences (Ferreira 1998:8).
To further study the relationship of KFC to the other French creoles, we recorded a
couple of texts (one near-death experience and one folk tale) from each group of people
we visited. These were taken back to the University of the West Indies to be looked at
more closely by a team of creolists.
The Galibi Marworno and the Karipuna display a few phonological differences in their
Creole. The Galibi Marworno also have slightly different vocabulary, which are not
borrowings from their long lost Indian languages, but from French. The Galibi Marworno
are said to speak more like the people from Cayenne than the Karipuna.
The following are some more observations that led us to conclude that the differences
between all the French Creoles do not pose a serious problem to intelligibility. Although
we did not do any formal testing of the KFC literature with the FGFC and the St. Lucian
Creole, we did play the KFC tape for Guianese and St. Lucian speakers, who were able to
recognize and understand it. A man from Kumarumă and another from St. Lucia seemed
to communicate freely on a range of topics. The speakers of St. Lucian and Martiniquan
were also able to understand local Karipuna stories that were read to them. They
appeared to comprehend well the “near death” and other personal stories that were told to
them in KFC. On the whole, it seemed as though the St. Lucian and Martiniquan
understood Karipuna speakers better than the Karipuna speakers understood them.
Finally, when a Galibi Marworno woman was shown the Haitian Creole Jesus film, she
appeared to understand just fine, although she may have been picking up a lot from
context.
In a French Creole survey done in 1981, Graham found a continuum between St. Lucian
and KFC. He found French Guianese understood 77 percent of Karipuna and 78 percent
of St. Lucian (Graham 1985:13). Like Graham, we played tapes of the three dialects and
arrived at basically the same conclusion. Our method consisted of recording native
speakers of the three dialects, reading the same eight verses of Scripture (John 1:43–51)
in their respective varieties. We then played the three tapes, in random order, and asked
ten comprehension questions. The more questions they got right, the higher their
comprehension. Two Galibi Marworno and three Karipuna people were selected simply
because they expressed willingness to be tested. In general, all like the KFC best, the St.

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Lucian Creole was the least preferred, and FGFC was somewhere in the middle. What
follows are the results of the test.
Karipuna
Claudio, 50-yr-old from Manga (who lived in Cayenne fifteen years), with help of wife,
who seemed to understand better than he:
85% St. Lucian
90% Guianese
90% Karipuna
The questionnaire in appendix B was answered by a 30-yr-old man from Manga, in a
room full of family members younger than he. In general terms, it is likely he scored
poorly because people his age speak KCF poorly. He likely did particularly badly in St.
Lucian Creole and FGFC because he hadn’t lived in French Guiana and had rarely or
never heard these varieties of Creole:
20% St. Lucian
50% Guianese
80% Karipuna
The data from the Karipuna village of Kunana was similar. They preferred the Karipuna,
and liked the St. Lucian least.
Galibi Marworno
Dinildo, a 40-yr-old man from Kumarumă:
75% St. Lucian
80% Guianese
90% Karipuna
Dinildo had met St. Lucians when he lived in French Guiana, and he found them to be
gentle people. In spite of his affection for St. Lucians, he commented that he liked the
Guianese literature better than the St. Lucian. He said Karipuna was clearest because,
“That’s the way we speak.”
The data from the Galibi Marworno of Uaha was similar. They liked the Karipuna best,
and St. Lucian least.
6.3 Literary development
Several KFC texts, mainly Biblical stories and folk tales, were translated and compiled
by Alfred and Joy Tobler (1983), Simeao Fort et al. (1983), and Rebeca Spires (1997).
CIMI has been involved in publishing primers, such as those edited and organized by
Fransisca Picanco Montejo (1985, cited in Ferreira 1998:8).

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7.0 Social Relations
7.1 Interaction with Portuguese Speakers
Karipuna
Over twenty years ago, Tobler wrote of the Karipuna, “There is a considerable degree of
integration with the Brazilian way of life, and an increasing influence of Portuguese is
seen amongst the younger people due to the opportunity for elementary schooling by
national teachers in the villages” (1983:10). Today the Karipuna, with five new villages
on the highway and a whole street of Karipuna in Oiapoque, are more integrated than
ever. Even so, many Karipuna feel the Brazilians discriminate against them and would be
embarrassed going to meetings in town.
Galibi Marworno
These people are also somewhat integrated into Brazilian society. Like the Karipuna, they
come into Oiapoque regularly for training and to get their pension checks. However, with
only two villages on the highway, they may not have as much contact with Portuguese
speakers as the Karipuna.
8.0 Bilingualism
All the Indians we talked to in the area could speak to us in Portuguese. Our most reliable
sources told us there were no Karipunas nor Galibi Marworno who were monolingual in
Creole. There is, of course, the question of fluency. The ones we spoke with sounded
quite comfortable in Portuguese, but we heard there were some older people who were
not as fluent.
9.0 Language vitality
Karipuna
In the first household, we interviewed Claudio and his wife, a couple in their 50s. Claudio
did the tests and told us stories in KFC, but when he would get stuck, he would speak
Portuguese to his wife. We also observed Claudio speaking to other family members, an
18-year-old Galibi Marworno lad and the chief of Manga. In all these instances, they used
Portuguese. Claudio said some Karipuna families spoke more KFC than his, others spoke
less. Although most people understand KFC, he admitted about half of the people in the
village of Manga cannot speak it. He said there were no monolingual Karipuna speakers.
We spoke with a second Manga household, a generation younger than Claudio’s. Not
surprisingly, they spoke little KFC and did very poorly on the tests. The 30-year-old head
of the home explained it was the older people who spoke mostly KFC.
The Karipuna village of Kunana, though relatively isolated, speaks much more
Portuguese than KFC.

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Generally, people feel that the loss of KFC is not a good thing. They feel nostalgia for the
time when they all spoke it. At the same time, people feel very positive about speaking
Portuguese.
Galibi Marworno
The Galibi Marworno village of Uaha is located downriver from the Karipuna village of
Kunana. Though Uaha is the less isolated of the two, they speak a lot more GFC there.
When a teenage boy was asked what language he preferred to speak in various settings,
he said he liked to speak GFC “in as many settings as he could.”
All the Galibi Marworno people we spoke to from Kumaruma were fluent in GFC, but
several had settled permanently in Oiapoque. We met a young man from Kumaruma who
was studying to become a teacher. He sounded enthusiastic about teaching wherever the
government sent him, but would rather not move back to Kumaruma. He said he
preferred town to the village because “you could get all the stuff you needed in town.”
It seems clear that the language of social advancement is Portuguese. The role models
and leaders are people like Vitoria Santos, who became an orthodontist and set up a clinic
in Oiapoque.
Palikur
Many of the Palikur in Brazil speak Creole as a second language. One of the domains of
Creole use is in Apoio gathering with the Galibi Marworno and Karipuna. In Brazil, all
Palikur seem to prefer speaking Palikur, but in French Guiana we observed the young
people speak only Creole and French. We were told by several Palikur in French Guiana
that the young people did not speak the Palikur language anymore. The Palikur elders in
French Guiana are concerned about the young people losing their culture. The Palikur
from Brazil and from French Guiana get together periodically and speak mostly in their
own language. We met Brazilian Palikur on the French side, trying to get a ride to
Cayenne; and we met a Guianese Palikur church group on the Brazilian side, planning a
joint service with their fellow Palikur.
Galibi do Oiapoque
The older people speak Galibi and Creole, but the younger ones speak only Portuguese
(Vidal, 2000, in www.socioambiental, org).

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17
Language Vitality of the Groups
Ethnonym
Taditional
Language
Creole
Portuguese
French
Karipuna
no longer exists MT of over 60 MT under 60
Galibi
no longer exists all speak is as
MT
all speak Port
Marworno
(except for
tribal songs)
Palikur
In Brazil, MT
In French
Guiana, Over
25 speak it as
MT
all speak Creole In Brazil, all
speak
Portuguese
In FG, under 25
speak French as
MT
Galibi do
Oiapoque
Older speaker
(55 and up) still
speak Galibi as
MT
Older people
speak Creole
All speak
Portuguese
Under 30 all
speak
Portuguese as
MT
10.0 Anthropological observations
Karipuna
Claudio seemed to take pride in touring us around the village, showing us the wooden
houses built on stilts and explaining about local edible and medicinal plants. He seemed
proud of his local knowledge.
Galibi Marworno
In Kumaruma, Vidal notes that the younger families prefer to build brick houses and that
several families have televisions, satellite dishes, and freezers (2000). This indicates
some of their culture is changing.
11.0 Recommendations
KFC would be a potential candidate for a limited scope literature project. There are two
(St. Lucian and Haitian), soon to be three (Guadealoupan), books available and another
(Haitian) in French Creole. This would make it possible to work on an adaptation from an
existing translation. In fact, with computer technology, it may be quite possible to do a
rapid adaptation that produces a rough draft of more literature in KFC
There is also the possibility of working together in partnership, or in a cluster, with other
French Creoles. We had a meeting with a leader in Cayenne, who is translating literature
into FGFC. When we told him how well the Creole speakers in Brazil understood
Guianese, he expressed interest in working together with the Karipuna translator with

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New Tribes Mission. Earlier, the New Tribes translator had told us she would like to visit
Cayenne and work in partnership with the FGFC translator, but she was not allowed into
the country without a passport.
The translator with New Tribes Mission asked SIL to be involved in giving logistical
support with her ongoing KFC translation and dictionary project. She said she would like
someone from SIL to visit once a year to give consultant help and encourage her. Without
a push from outside, she said her translation work would likely grind to a stop.
11.1 Amapá French Creole (AFC)
Peter (a St. Lucian Creole speaker), Jalis (a GFC speaker), and Stan Anonby flew down
to Macapá to investigate reports that there were 25,000 AFC speakers around the capital
city. The report came from an unknown source in the 1970s, and was recorded in the
Ethnologue.
When we asked people in Macapá if they knew where any Creole speakers lived, they
invariably pointed us to people who spoke French, who had lived in Guiana, or were
Guianese. We met a recent immigrant from Guiana who told us of four other Guianese
living in Macapá. We visited a Black neighborhood (Laguinho) and a former runaway
slave colony (Curiau) and were told that none of these people ever spoke Creole.
In 1998, Julieta de Andrade wrote about the Lanc-Patua in northern Brazil. She talked
about gold miners who immigrated to Brazil (mostly to Pará and Amapá) from the
Guianas. It made mention of English, Dutch, and French Creoles. She makes no mention
of any local French Creole community in the Macapá area. She found the immigrants
from the Guianas living interspersed among the local Brazilians (something we also
found to be true in Macapá). She noted the second generation of immigrants spoke
Creole, but not the third generation.
AFC does not appear to need translation because there is no native Creole spoken around
Macapá. The only people in the area who speak Creole are immigrants from French
Guiana. It appears the information that there are 25,000 speakers of AFC is false.
11.2 Guianese Creole (FGFC)
There are around 80,000 Creole speakers in French Guiana out of a total population of
175,000. Thirty thousand are immigrants speaking Haitian Creole, and 50,000 are native
Guianese. The Guianese Creoles are shrinking as a percentage of the Guianese population
(Queixalós 2000:300). Their use of FGFC is also giving way to French. The Haitians
could be heard talking Creole with each other, and using Creole in meetings; but we only
heard the Guianese speaking French with each other. We were told there might be some
elderly ladies in remote areas that were monolingual in FGFC.
Graham said the Guianese comprehend 78 percent of St. Lucian Creole (1985:13).
However, the St. Lucian in our group was able to understand Guianese clearly. It was
interesting to observe that the translator into FGFC used French when meeting with a St.

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Lucian (who claims to speak no French). Maybe it was because Creole was considered
inappropriate in a formal session like a meeting.
Appendix A: Transcriptions of John 1:43–51 in St. Lucian, FGCF, and KFC
St Lucian
43 An li denmen, Jézi té fe lidé pou alé Galili. Jézi jwenn Filip ek I di’y, “Swi mwen!”
44 Filip té soti Befsayda, vil-la koté Androu ekPita té ka westé-a.
45 Filip Jwenn Natannyel ék I di’y, “Nou ja jwenn moun-an Moziz ek sé pwofet-la té
ékwi asou an liv lwa-a. Non’y sé Jézi, gason Jozef, I soti Nazawet.”
46 Natannyel di’y, “Ki bon bahay ki sa soti an Nazawet?” Filip di’y, “Vini we.”
47 Le Jézi we Natannyel ka vini koté I yé-a, I di, “Mi an jan Izwayel pi, la pa ni pyes wiz
an li!”
48 Natannyel mandé’y, “Ki mannye ou fe konnet mwen?” Jézi di’y, “Mwen we’w le ou
té anba pyé fwi-a dépi avan Filip té kwiyé’w.
49 Natanyel di’y, “Titja, ou sé Gason Dondyé! Sé ou ki wa iswayel!”
50 Jézi di’y, “Es sé paski mwen di mwen we’w anba pyé fwi-a ou kwe sa? Ou kay we pli
gwo bagay pasé sa!”
51 I di yo, “Mwen da di zot lavéwité-a, ou kay we syel-la uve ek nanj Bondjé ka mouté
désnn asou mwen Gason Lézom-lan.”
FGCF
43 Roun jou pasé, Jézi désidé pati Galilé, é li kontré ké Filip, li di-l' : «Swiv mo».
44 Filip té sa moun Bčtsayida, a la lonbri André ké Pyčr té planté osi.
45 Filip kontré ké Natanayčl épi li di-l' : «Nou trapé moun Moyiz té ékri
asou-l' annan lalwa-a, moun profčt-ya té palé di-l'-a : a Jézi, moun
Nazarčt, pitit Jozčf».
46 Natanačl di-l' : «Es li ganyen bon kichoz ki pouvé soti Nazarčt?».
Filip réponn li : «Vini wč ké to wéy».
47 Lň Jézi wč Natanayčl ka vini asou-l', i di asou-l' : «Men roun vrč
Izrayélit, li pa ganyen pyčs mové lčspri.»
48 Natanayčl di-l' : «Kot to končt mo, en ?» Jézi réponn li : «Anvan
Filip rélé to, mo té ja wč to, lň to té anba pyé fig-a.»
49 Natanayčl réponn : «Rabbi to, to sa Pitit Bondjé, rwč Izrayčl.»
50 Jézi réponn li : «Renk paski mo di to mo wč to anba pyé fig-a, to ka
krč ; mé sa ki dčyč pňkň touché, to ké wč pli gran kichoz kisa.»
51 E i di-l' ankň : «Enren sa mo di zňt-a a lavérité, dipi jodla zňt ké
wč syčl-a louvri ké zanj Bondjé ka monté désann laro Pitit wonm (sa ki lé di
Pitit Bondjé, li voyé annan lachč-a).»
KFC
43 Solădjimë Jezi deside ale pu hejiő dji Galiléia. Ăvă li ale, li kőthe ke Filip I dji bai li:
Vinď ke mo!
44 Filip ate dji sidadji dji Betsaida, kote André I Pié hete.
45 Kă Filip kőthe ke so kamahad Nataniel, li dji: No thuve mun la a hespék dji kimun
Moisés ekhi lădă Pahól Bődje, mun la a hespék dji kimun phofét iela ekhi osi; a Jezi, Juzé
so pitxit, dji sidadji Nazaré.

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56 La Nataniel dumăde: Mo pa khe, u dejá konét un mun bő dji Nazaré? Filip hepón:
Vinď gade!
47 Kă Jezi ue Nataniel hive, li dji: Gade! A la fiká un uom siaie ki avuemă sa dji pov dji
Ishael.
48 Ëbe Nataniel dumăde bai Jezi: Dji kote u u konét mo? Jezi hepón: Ăvă Filip ale aple
u, mo te dehá ue u asi ăba figueira (un kalite piebua).
49 La Nataniel dji: Metés, u sa Bődje so Pitxit! U sa hue dji Ishael.
50 La Jezi hepón: U khe lasu mo sélmă pase mo dji ki mo te ue u ăba figueira? U ke ue
boku bagaj iela pi ghă pase sa.
51 Mo ka dji un lavehite: Zót ke ue lahosiel la luvhi I Bődje so zăj iela ki ke mote i ke
desan pu adohe Pitxit dji Uom di sa mo mém.
Appendix B: Questions from John 1:43–51
1) Where did Jesus go?
2) To whom did Jesus say, “Follow me.”
3) Where was Philip from?
4) Who else was from Bethsaida?
5) Whom did Philip go and find?
6) What did Nathaniel think about people from Nazareth?
7) What did Jesus think about Nathaniel?
8) Where was Nathaniel before he met Jesus?
9) What two things did Nathaniel say about Jesus?
10)What did Jesus tell Nathaniel he was going to see?

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Appendix C: Responses to Questions from John 1:43–51
2
Karipuna
Claudio, 50-yr-old from Manga, (who lived in Cayenne fifteen years), with help of wife,
who seemed to understand better than he:
85 percent St. Lucian
1)
6) x
2)
7)
3)
8)
4)
9) 1/2
5)
10)
90 percent Guianese
1)
6)
2)
7) x
3)
8)
4)
9)
5)
10)
90 percent Karipuna
1)
6) x
2)
7)
3)
8)
4)
9)
5)
10)
A 30-yr-old man from Manga, in a room full of family members younger than he:
20 percent St. Lucian
1)
6) x
2)
7) x
3) x
8) x
4) x
9) x
5) x
10)x
50 percent Guianese
1)
6)
2)
7)
3) x
8)
4) x
9) x
5) x
10)x
2
The “x” following the number indicates an incorrect response.

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22
80 percent Karipuna
1)
6) x
2)
7)
3)
8)
4)
9) x
5)
10)
Galibi
Dinildo, a 40-yr-old man from Kumarumă:
75 percent St. Lucian
1)
6) x
2)
7) x
3)
8) 1/2
4)
9)
5)
10)
80 percent Guianese
1)
6)
2)
7)
3)
8) 1/2
4) 1/2
9)
5)
10) x
90 percent Karipuna
1)
6) x
2)
7)
3)
8)
4)
9)
5)
10)
Dinildo had met St. Lucians when he lived in French Guiana, and he found them to be
gentle people. In spite of his affection for St. Lucians, he commented that he liked the
Guianese literature better than the St. Lucian. He said Karipuna was clearest because,
“That’s the way we speak.”

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A Report on the Creoles of Amapá
By Stan Anonby
SIL International
2007
SIL Electronic Survey Report 2007-020, September 2007
Copyright © 2007 Stan Anonby and SIL International
All rights reserved

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