Jesse Bowman Bruchac is a Native American author and language teacher from the Abenaki tribe. He has dedicated much of his life to studying the Abenaki language and preserving the Abenaki culture. He created the first Abenaki language website. He has travelled throughout the United States teaching both the Abenaki language and culture. When he is not traveling, Jesse works as the treasurer for The Ndakinna Education Center and teaches wilderness survival classes. He also is an active martial artist, skilled in Brazilian jiu-jitsu, isshin-ryū, pentjak silat, and taekwondo. Jesse has worked extensively with the Abenaki language, and taught other Eastern Algonquian languages including the Lenni Lenape languagesMunsee and Unami; Mohegan-Pequot, and Passamaquoddy. He is webmaster of WesternAbenaki.com, a free online language learning portal. Abenaki scholar Frederick Matthew Wiseman, author of The Voice of the Dawn, calls him an "important contributor to the Abenaki Renaissance." He has worked in a short film by Alanis Obomsawin, When All the Leaves Are Gone. Jesse was a translator for the AMC hit show , and a composer for the operettaThe Purchase of Manhattan. Jesse was also a translator, dialect/dialogue coach and composer for the National Geographic movie Saints & Strangers, a film which includes over an hour of translated dialogue in the Western Abenaki language and two months of on set actor training and filming in South Africa with over two dozen actors.
Life and education
Bruchac was born to Joseph Bruchac and Carol Bruchac. He attended Saratoga Springs High School. He studied at Goddard College in Plainfield, VT, where he was primarily interested in creating a syllabus for teaching the Abenaki language. Since then, Jesse has dedicated his life to the preservation and revitalization of the Abenaki language and culture. In The Language of Basketmaking, Bruchac particularly focuses on revitalizing important writers such as Henry Lorne Masta and Joseph Laurent. He began teaching conversational Abenaki first at the high school level, and then through the Abenaki Tribal Museum and Cultural Center, until he moved onto other projects in 1999. Bruchac lives in his hometown Greenfield Center, New York with his two children, Carolyn Bruchac and Jacob Bruchac.
Martial arts
Bruchac began wrestling at the age of 6. In 1990 he became the team captain and the New York StateClass A champion for the Suburban Council Championship team, and was awarded the Steve Rue Memorial Award. As an adult he has competed in six different North American Grappling Association championships. From these he brought home four gold medals and two silver medals. He has also competed as a part of the International Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Federation, and from these tournaments has brought home five gold medals. Jesse co-founded Western New YorkMixed Martial Arts which has "thrived and helped produce major BJJ competitors and MMA talent." In 2011, he joined his brother Jim Bruchac as a martial arts instructor at the Saratoga Kyokushin.
Public appearances
Bruchac appeared in several episodes of a public access television program called Story By Story, which aired out of Proctor's Theater. In 1993, he co-founded a musical group, The Dawnland Singers, with his father Joseph Bruchac, brother James Bruchac, and aunt Marge Bruchac. John Kirk and Ed Lowman are accompanying instrumentalists. The group has performed across the United States, Canada, and Europe; it once opened for The Grateful Dead at Woodstock 2 in Highgate, VT. In July and August of 2011, Bruchac presented at the Adirondack Center for Writing's Native American Writers Series, which celebrates a diverse set of writers, including but not limited to the Abenaki and Mohawk nations.
Books
Bruchac, Jesse, Joseph Alfred Elie Joubert, and Jeanne A. Brink. L8dwaw8gan Wji Abaznodakaw8gan: The Language of Basket Making. Greenfield Center, NY: Bowman, 2010.
Bruchac, Jesse. Mosbas and the Magic Flute. Greenfield Center, NY: Bowman, 2010.
Bruchac, Jesse. The Woman and the Kiwakw. N.p.: Lulu.com, 2013.
Bruchac, Joseph, and Jesse Bruchac. Nisnol Siboal = Two Rivers: Poems in English and Abenaki. Greenfield Center, NY: Bowman, 2011.
Wzôkhilain, Pial, and Jesse Bruchac. The Gospel of Mark Translated into the Abenaki Indian, English and French Languages. N.p.: Lulu.com, 2011.