Nuorttanaste Explained

Nuorttanaste
Launched:1898
Editor:Ann Solveig Nystad
Language:Northern Sámi
Headquarters:Kárášjohka, Norway
Issn:0333-418X
Website:nuorttanaste.no

Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste is a Northern Sámi religious publication based in Norway. It has published continuously since 1898, making it the longest running Sámi publication still being published.

History

Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste (modern Northern Sámi spelling Northern Sami: Nuorttanásti), which means "The Eastern Star," was founded by "sled preacher" Gustav Lund, a travelling pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Free Church of Norway who sought to evangelize Sámi in part by using their native tongue. In 1898, he founded Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste in Finnmark, and the paper soon began publishing news articles and letters from readers alongside its religious content. The reporters and correspondents balanced the publisher's desire for religious content with readers' desire to receive news in their native language.[1]

The first issue of Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste was printed by Lund using a portable printing press. As the paper grew, it established formal offices in Sigerfjord. Over the years it moved several times before setting up its first permanent printing press was in Gáivuotna Municipality. The press alternated between Gáivuotna and Oslo for several years before setting up offices in Vuonnabahta in 1960. In 1992, the paper's headquarters moved to Kárášjohka.

For much of its history, including during World War II, Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste published twice a month; it currently publishes 11 issues each year. It has subscribers in Norway, Sweden, and Finland.[2]

Editors

Cultural impact

For much of the 20th century, Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste was the only newspaper publishing in Northern Sámi. Therefore, the paper played a major role in supporting Sámi literacy, along with Sámi language and culture.[3]

For most of its publication history, Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste has used the J.A. Friis orthography, which is the same writing system used for the Sámi Bible.[4] From 1948 to 1958, the paper used the Bergsland–Ruong orthography, which was the standard for writing Northern Sámi in Norway and Sweden (but not Finland), before reverting to the J.A. Friis orthography. Since 2004, Northern Sami: Nuorttanaste has used the pan-Scandinavian 1979 orthography.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Solbakk . Aage . Sámi mediahistorjá . Sámi Media History . 28 April 2020 . ČálliidLágádus . se . Kárášjohka, Norway.
  2. Web site: Nuorttanaste - Bures boahttin . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090910081834/http://www.nuorttanaste.no/ . 2009-09-10 . 2009-07-01 . Nuorttanaste . Northern Sami.
  3. Somby . Katri S. . 2010 . Nuorttanaste — Vuoiŋŋalaš bláđđi vai sámi servvodatguoddi . Nuorttanaste — Spiritual Magazine or Sámi Community Carrier . Sámi Dieđalaš Áigečála . se . 21 October 2019 . 2.
  4. Book: Strategic Plan for Sami Church Life . 2011 . The Sami Church Council, the Church of Norway . 9788275451079 . Oslo, Norway . 52–53 . 13 May 2020.
  5. Book: Kahn, Lily . North Sámi: An Essential Grammar . Riitta-Liisa . Valijärvi . Taylor & Francis . 2017 . 978-1-317-55811-8 . Milton Park, England . 8 . 12 May 2020.