Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Navajo Code Talkers: An American Treasure

According to the Navajo Code Talkers official website, “the Navajo are a Native American tribe, the second largest of its kind as federally recognized … The Navajo people are mostly concentrated in the southwestern United States. Around 300,460 people are enrolled as tribal members according to data available till 2015. There is what we call the Navajo Nation which is an independent governmental body responsible for managing the Navajo reservation. The area under its governance is primarily in the Four Corners area covering 27,000 square miles of Arizona, New Mexico and Utah. Arizona is home to around a hundred and forty thousand Navajo people. New Mexico is home to over a hundred thousand. While the primary language spoken by the people is Navajo, they do speak English.”

Navajo Code Talkers: Defending America

The website further cites that the beginning of the Navajo Code Talkers took place on May 4, 1942 when 29 Navajo Indians were sent to San Diego, California. These men would be recruits for a unique U.S. Marine Corps program.

Their mission, critical to America’s armed forces during World War II, involved creating an undecipherable code without a written alphabet. This code would be further complicated with common Navajo words having substitutions confined only to memory.

This communication code was critical for confounding enemy forces so that American troop plans, movements, and communications remained secure.

The Navajo Code talkers program involved American Indians leaving their sacred home land for the first time to travel overseas. Their efforts on the front line of battle contributed to the saving of countless American lives.

During World War II about 400 Navajos participated in the code program. These code talkers were critical to America's victory and vital to every U.S. Marine assault in the Pacific from 1942-1945.

Peter MacDonald: Code Talker Legend

On November 27, Peter MacDonald, president of the 13 surviving Navajo Code Talkers, was honored with two of his Code Talker colleagues at the White House.

After watching his inspiring remarks expressive of his American patriotism, I took time to do some research on this great man. I came across an inspirational documentary film titled “A Journey of Perseverance” about MacDonald and the Navajo Code Talkers.

The film is archived at multiple sites including the Navajo Nation Museum and the Smithsonian Institute of the American Indian. Hopefully, it will someday also be archived at a new museum in Washington, D.C. that honors the legacy of the Navajo Code Talkers.

In the film, MacDonald speaks about the Navajo language as non-written form of communication. He stated that this is what made it so successful since it could only be understood by the 400 Navajo Code Talkers in the U.S. Marine Corps.

MacDonald also stated that all 600 code words were top secret to Code Talkers only. He illustrated how the code saved a company of Marines pinned down by the enemy on Iwo Jima.

During this incident, a Navajo Code Talker from the front line communicated in code a distress call pinpointing their location and called for immediate demolition team intervention.

A team of Marines was immediately dispatched, unbeknownst to the enemy due to the code, and the Marines in harm’s way were saved.

MacDonald also shared these inspirational words in the film which captures the resolve of the Navajo Code Talkers:

“Be strong, have a strong mind. Have a strong heart. Have a strong body. Run and make yourself physically strong, mentally strong, and spiritually strong. You can do anything, no matter what it is.”

Final Reflections

Peter MacDonald’s courageous service was eloquently expressed during the Nov. 27 White House ceremony with these words to all of America:

“So thank you very much. The 13 of us, we still have one mission-that mission is to build national Navajo Code Talker Museum. We want to preserve this unique World War II history for our children, grandchildren, your children, your grandchildren to go through that museum.

“Why? Because what we did truly represents who we are as Americans. America, we know, is composed of diverse community. We have different languages, different skills, different talents, and different religion. But when our way of life is threatened, like the freedom and liberty that we all cherish, we come together as one. And when we come together as one, we are invincible. We cannot be defeated. That's why we need this national Navajo Code Talker Museum so that our children, the future generation, can go through that museum and learn why America is so strong.”

America is deservingly proclaimed as “the land of the free and home of the brave.” This proclamation is possible only because of patriots such as the Navajo Code Talkers who honorably served in the U.S. Marine Corps and all our armed forces.

Our nation must eternally honor their sacrifices, patriotism, and valor.

These patriots served as ethical protectors of America’s freedom, and their museum deserves to be built.

May America be eternally grateful for Navajo Code Talkers. The Navajo Code Talkers rose to the occasion to exercise America’s sacrosanct right to protect ourselves and all people of moral decency. They deserve our admiration, respect, and a Navajo Code Talkers Museum to forever remember their sacrifices.

Related Coverage:

With Honor and Leadership the US Marine Corps Protects America

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Vincent is author of 250 articles, including his weekly column titled “Reawakening the Nation” for the Epoch Times; 35 countries, 21 languages, and growing. As a national speaker, he has addressed audiences nationwide on issues critical to America including ethical leadership, violence prevention, and crisis planning.

Photo: Bill Toledo and Albert Smith, Navajo Code Talkers, pose for a photo while visiting Cannon Air Force Base, N.M., Jan. 30 - Feb. 1, 2013. These New Mexico natives visited the base to speak to Airmen and raise funds to enable their mission to preserve the code talker history, legacy, and language. (U.S. Air Force photo/Senior Airman Alexxis Pons Abascal)

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