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Critics of President Barack Obama’s decision to drop President William McKinley as the namesake of America’s tallest mountain say the move is insulting to a great president from Ohio. Anonymous social media critics point to a more hidden motive in the mountain’s new name, Denali. One image circulating on Facebook accused the president of reaching back to his Kenyan roots for inspiration, claiming that ‘Denali’ is the Kenyan word for ‘black power.’ The meme’s claim is so ridiculous that you wonder if it’s just a bad joke. To start, Kenyan is not a language. The two official languages of Kenya are English and Swahili. Neither of those languages are exclusive to one country, as Swahili is also spoken in a number of different African nations. A search of multiple Swahili dictionaries turned up no results for the word Denali. As our fact-checker friends at Snopes found , the Swahili word for black is mweusi , and the Swahili word for power is nguvu. That doesn’t amount to Denali, which has roots in the word Deenaalee in Koyukon, a native language of Alaska currently spoken by just 300 people . Koyukon is part of the Athabaskan language family, which also includes Navajo and several Apache languages native to the American Southwest. Deenaalee approximately translates to the High One, according to James Fall, an official at Alaska’s Department of Fish and Game, and James Kari, a linguist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks’ Native Language Center. Obama called the name change a step to reflect the heritage of Alaska Natives. While the meme’s claim is ridiculous, we were able to verify that the viral image does depict the real Denali . Our ruling The meme claims ‘Denali’ is the Kenyan word for ‘black power.’ Nope. The word Denali doesn’t show up in Swahili, one of Kenya’s two national languages. Instead, it’s Koyukon Athabaskan for high or tall. We rate the meme’s claim Pants on Fire! https://www.sharethefacts.co/share/a7790d84-e8d8-45e2-8a6d-303a57f6d11b
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