After parents and staff members initiated the idea for an Assyrian language program at Niles Township High School District 219 several years ago, the program has won a regional award. In this December 2022 photo, students in the program are shown at a dinner celebrating the approval of the course. From left are Gabriela Sulayman, George Yousif, Crystal Patto, Odisho Lazar, Lina Biram, John Shlimon and Ashley Boudakh. (Niles Township High School District 219)
Ishtartv.com - chicagotribune.com
By Alexandra Murphy, April
3, 2026
After Assyrian families in
Skokie, Niles, Morton Grove and Lincolnwood spent nearly a decade advocating
for an Assyrian language program at Niles Township High School District
219, the program, the first of its kind in the nation, is enjoying robust
enrollment and has received a regional award.
The effort to create an Assyrian
language curriculum in District 219 initially started in 2015, when members of
an Assyrian parent group in the district called Suraye started asking for the
language to be offered in schools.
Most of the parents were
immigrants who began arriving in the north suburbs in large numbers in the
1980s and ’90s after being displaced in the Iran-Iraq War and the Gulf War.
The parent group collected around
700 signatures in a petition to show student interest in taking classes during
the school year.
One of the biggest things we saw
was the gap between how many Assyrian students there are in the district and
how few opportunities there were to formally learn their language,” Ramina
Samuel, a school counselor at Niles North High School who helped establish the
program, told the Pioneer Press in an interview.
She explained the Assyrian
community makes up about 30% of the district and that before the language was
offered in public schools, it was primarily taught in churches and community
centers.
In 2016 and 2017, the district
first offered an introductory Assyrian course during the summer as a general
elective, but it did not fulfill the world language requirement.
Samuel joined advocacy efforts
for the program in 2018. In 2021, William Sargool — previously a math teacher
in the district and now one of the language program’s instructors — joined the
effort and helped create a proposal to the School Board.
However, Samuel explained that
she and the other instructors faced obstacles because Assyrian was not then
recognized as an accredited language with the Illinois State Board of
Education. She said the proposal was not initially approved.
After working with both state and
local officials, including showing the list of coursework to ISBE, Assyrian was
added to the state’s course catalog in 2022. The proposal was then approved by
District 219’s Board of Education in November of that year.
The following year, the district
hired Christine Yousif as its first full-time Assyrian language teacher. With
the program established, the next step for educators was to start building a
curriculum.
“There is no existing model for
teaching Assyrian at a public high school,” Yousif said. “So we had to work
with what already exists.”
Samuel said she and the other
educators worked with Assyrian resources from around the world, including
reviewing curriculum used at a school program in Australia for reference and
consulting with educators in Iraq.
Assyrian is now offered in a
four-year sequence at Niles North and Niles West High Schools, both in Skokie,
in District 219. It’s also offered at Maine East High School in Park Ridge,
which is part of Maine Township High School District 207. The D219 educators
shared the curriculum with educators in D207.
At Niles West and Niles North,
130 students are enrolled in Assyrian language courses.
Most Assyrian families in the
Skokie to Niles area immigrated from Iraq and Syria, with some from Iran, in
the 1980s and 1990s after wars in their homelands, Samuel said, adding that she
came from Iraq in 2004. However, some Assyrians came to the Chicago area as
early as the 1880s.
Samuel added that while the
majority of students who take the classes are of Assyrian heritage, it is open
to all students.
“The focus is developing
everything they’re speaking,” said Sargool. “A lot of the students do have that
prior knowledge and speaking, but we still focus on speaking, listening,
reading and writing skills, but while intertwining that cultural piece within
whatever unit we tend to be in.”
The program was honored in
February as the 2026 recipient of the Languages for All award by the
Central States Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages. The award
honors educators who support student engagement and cultural understanding
through less commonly taught languages, according to a Feb. 6 website news item
from District 219.
For Samuel, Sargool and Yousif,
the recognition speaks to the years of persistence and hard work that went into
forming the program in order to help students feel more valued in their
language and culture.
“What I hope for students to
leave with is empowerment,” Samuel said. “I would like for them to leave with
an empowered identity where they can be themselves and see their value and what
their culture can contribute to society.”
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