Navajo Code Talkers
The year was 1942 and the United
States and its allies were currently losing WWII. The improbable scenario of Nazi Germany and
Japan taking control of the United States and it’s allies was looking more and
more like it was becoming a reality. Our biggest problem: communication.
Japanese cryptographers were
breaking our top-secret military codes just as quickly as we were creating
them. Our only hope to ensure the freedom of the U.S. and ending the costliest
war in the history of the world, lie in the language of the Navajo Indians, the
Dine Warriors, who coincidentally had been treated with horrible disrespect and
betrayal throughout the short history of the United States.
In accomplishing such a fantastic
feat that resulted in saving the world from the spread of communism the Navajo
Code Talkers would receive tremendous amounts of praise. This was not the
homecoming received as you may suspect. They were told not to talk about
anything they had done during the war because the code was “unbreakable”, and
they might use it again (Nabokov 342).
According to Robert Carlisle from
the Encyclopedia of Intelligence and Counter Intelligence,
“The Navajo Language was perfect
for this project for a number of reasons: It is based on guttural sounds,
inflection, tone, pitch, and pronunciation, so the same Navajo word can have
multiple meanings that are almost impossible for a non-Navajo to understand.
Also, the Navajo language was incredibly pure….”
The
reason the language was so successful was because of the Navajo tradition of
storytelling instead of written language. From the time they are small
children, they lay in a tent and listen to an elder tell stories and eventually
start repeating the stories back to the elders (Carey). They
must be told precisely what they are hearing including the emphasis and
inflection of tone before they will graduate to learn new stories. Everything
must be repeated exactly as it was told. This is because there was no written
language, their history and stories were passed down verbally from generation
to generation (Carey). (Watch an interview
with Peter MacDonald (Navajo Code Talker) by clicking here)
The code talkers remained silent, until
in 1968 when the U.S. government finally declassified the code talker program.
Despite being used in two more wars
and being cheated out of their recognition and honor, if they had to do it all
over again they would with tremendous pride because it is the Warrior’s way to
protect the people and the land he loves.

Photo of Original WW2 Code talkers
Carey, Harold. “Peter MacDonald Tribal Chairman and Code Talker” navajopeople.org. Retrieved from http://navajopeople.org/blog/peter-macdonald-tribal-chairman-code-talker/
Nabokov, Peter. Native American Testimony: a Chronicle of Indian-White Relations from Prophecy to the Present, 1492-1992. Penguin, 1999.
Russell, Steve. “Honoring Veterans II: Belated Honor for Code Talkers.” Indian Country Media Network. National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) Embassy of Tribal Nations, 10 Nov. 2014 https://newsmaven.io/indiancountrytoday/archive/honoring-veterans-ii-belated-honor-for-code-talkers-3OWQg4erzUyw_4B-T2Rx5w/
Photo of Original WW2 Code talkers
Chester Nez
I have never heard of the Navajo doing this "code talking" ; and at this point I think it is normally for me to say " of course they did not get recognition". I feel like natives had so much to offer, which the Euro-Americans realized this and just used them for what was needed at the time. Very sad; especially because they are so resourceful and should have been respected for it.
ReplyDeleteI found the story of the Navajo code talkers astounding. I came across the story of the code talkers when they visited with the present President in the White House and again in Nabokov's book. I was curious to know more about the code talkers and the historical background of their participation was outstanding.
ReplyDeleteAdmittedly, my first thought concerning the U.S. government was the realization that they needed a prime line of defense to defeat their enemy. The very language which they beat out of the children at the Indian boarding schools was the language that was needed as a secret weapon that defeated the Japanese during World War II.
One of the code talkers, who touched my heart, stated that the Indian school treated them in a military style, never mentioning the abuses and brutality, and that he and his team of twenty-nine
were trained at boot camp for two weeks because of the training they received at the Indian school. Not one negative word about what he really endured while a student at the U.S. government Indian boarding school.
Though they did not receive the honor, it took many years, that was due as it had been done for white veterans, they were honored to serve THEIR country. The code talkers words spoke loudly, their pride was not a chest pounding "look what we did," but words that shared their love for the land.