
It began with a Navajo grandfather telling the story of his medal to an undisclosed number of grandchildren. He began with cultural references, and told of his early life growing up on the reservation and having to go to the white "belagaanaa" school to learn white man's ways and language. Ironically, Navajo children were taught in this school that their native language was no good, and were not allowed to speak it.
When WWII broke out, however, and the young man came of age to join the military, the Navajo language became the one unbreakable code used to transmit vital battle information between the various generals and the fighting men in the Pacific theatre. Only a select few Navajos were recruited for the Code Talkers, but many more Native Americans joined the military, to defend their--and our--homeland from something even worse than the white invasion that stole an entire continent from them only a hundred or so years before.
I totally recommend this book to anyone with even a passing interest in World War II history, or in the Navajo or native American cultures.
Walk in beauty, my friends.
Reviewed by a staff member, First Regional Library
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