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Olukoju argues that the original idea must have arisen from his experience of literacy in coastal
Liberia during his sojourn there, and that the visionary experience described may have followed from a period of work on the idea. Tuchscherer and Hair (2002) have presented evidence that exposure to the
61:, the script certainly dates from after 1819, when Bukele returned to the interior of Liberia after a period of residence on the coast. The syllabary is supposed to have been revealed to him in a dream, and to have been communicated to friends and tribal elders.
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After his creation of the syllabary Bukele and his supporters set up a school in
Dshondu to teach the system, and other schools soon followed at Bandakoplo, Mala and other locations.
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Dalby, David. 1967. A survey of the indigenous scripts of
Liberia and Sierra Leone: Vai, Mende, Kpelle, and Bassa.
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Tuchscherer, Konrad and P.E.H. Hair. 2002. Cherokee in West Africa: Examining the
Origins of the Vai Script.
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to have invented it around 1833, although dates as early as 1815 have been alleged. According to
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was part of the process. Part-Cherokee migrants from the US lived in coastal
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