After that prayer time, linguistic experts were called in from all over the world. Dr Marsha Susuki was one such linguist, who—as she was flying over the ocean on her way from Brazil to Kona, Hawaii—was trying to think of a way to break it to David Hamilton that such a language was just not possible. Over twenty years of linguistics experience with numerous and multiple languages had convinced her that this was not a doable thing.
But the revelation that God had given Loren, David and others at the University of the Nations campus in Kona, was genuine. When she arrived in Kona, she saw the evidence and heard the explanations and she was convinced that it was indeed possible.
Several years later, this innovation is now a reality and is being revealed to the word and is changing lives.
Uniskript is a game-changer that can release illiterate people out of poverty with rapid literacy progress. It equips teachers and linguistic innovators with unique writing and teaching methods to overcome educational injustice.
Globally, one out of every five people have little to no reading skills.
793 million adults who lack basic literacy skills;
Nearly 2000 language groups that don’t have access to the Bible in their mother tongue;
Over 1800 small people groups who have no writing system in their languages;
People with dyslexia who face a huge challenge when trying to learn the Romanized letters.
With Uniskript, we can help change this…
:A Piece of Historical Background:
Uniskript can be traced back to 1446 when King Sejoung launched the Korean alphabet, which triggered a literacy revolution in Korea. In 2002, Korean linguist Dr. Kim Cho shared her doctorate discoveries on the ancient alphabet at the UofN, hoping it could be used to benefit people with poor literacy and no access to the Bible.The basic idea was then further developed by a team of linguists from the UofN. As a result, the letters were redefined and a technique created to generate new alphabets, that are both attractive and relevant.