4-year-old named Gowennotha sat at the table sorting a puzzle with a 30-year-old Mohawk man in a white two-story house that sits next to the Onondaga Nation School on the Onondaga Nation, 15 minutes south of Syracuse, New York. Just moments before the puzzle sorting, Gowennotha walked into the lavender room talking to her mother, effortlessly flipping between Onondaga and English. Hode’hnyahädye’, the Mohawk man, didn’t understand what she said sometimes. As she looked around for a puzzle piece at the table, she turned to Hode’hnyahädye’ and asked in English, “Where is…” and her sentence trailed off. Gowennotha quickly finished her sentence in Onondaga, “…ji•hah!”