- Per Fokstad
Per Fokstad (born
3 September 1890 , died10 December 1973 ) was a teacher, politician, and intellectual of Sami origin from Norway, and a pioneer in the fight for the use of theSami languages in Norwegian schools.Fokstad's parents were yard workers in
Bonakas in Tana (Deatnu). The language used in the family's household was Sami, and Per, who was the youngest of five, didn't know Norwegian when he began school. He started school as a 19 year old at Tromsø's teacher college, and took his examination there in 1912. The same fall, he began as a teacher at "Norskholmen skole" in his home municipality of Tana. In the following ten years, he would take a leave of absence for further studies, three of the times in countries other than Norway.For the 1915-1916 school year, he studied at
Askov folk high school inDenmark . In the fall of 1917, he studied the violin in Oslo. From 1919 to 1920, he studied atWoodbrooke College inBirmingham ,England . The year after, he was at the "Institut du pantheon de France" inParis , where he first discoveredHenri Bergson s philosophy.Even in his first published article in 1917, he was fighting for
Sami language training in school. At a conference in 1919 he was the architect behind a resolution that required:# That the
Sami language should be studied for the first three school years.
# That all teaching about Sami religion should be done in theSami language .
# Introducing Norwegian as a foreign language.He followed up the idea with an article in 1923, and with a detailed report on "The parliamentarian school commission" (1923-1926). In 1937, together with headmaster M. Bremer, a «cultural institute for the Sami».
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