28 分鐘

DeCoded: The Untold Stories of Native Veterans Whose Tribal Languages Helped Win WWII Native Voice One Podcast

    • 社會與文化

The government that tried to destroy Indigenous culture used it as a weapon on the battlefield. Most of the men who had been sworn to secrecy during the war kept those secrets as long as they lived. But their families and tribal communities remember.







Host Travis Zimmerman helps tell two stories: One about Lex Porter, an Ojibwe speaking code talker from Grand Portage and a member of the Fond du Lac band of Lake Superior Chippewa (Nagaajiwanaang); the other about Reuben St. Clair, a Dakota speaking coder talker from the Lower Sioux Indian Community (Mdewakanton).







The World War Two code talker program was declassified in 1968. The public learned about Navajo (or Diné) Marines who were deployed in the Pacific Theater. Then, in 2008, Congress passed the Code Talker Recognition Act to acknowledge other tribes whose languages had been used in the war. In 2013 it honored tribal leaders and families from 33 tribal nations. We'll never know the numbers of actual code talkers, but the stories they shared are still being told.







Special thanks:Gary Robinson at Tribal Eye ProductionsTravis Zimmerman, Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior ChippewaFreedom Porter, Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior ChippewaDarlene St. Clair, Lower Sioux Dakota OyateMoira (“meer ree”) Villiard (“vill-yerd”), Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior ChippewaAllison Waukau (“wah-kaw”), Menominee/NavajoLaurie Stern, producer







DeCoded is produced by Minnesota Native News & Ampers, Diverse Radio

The government that tried to destroy Indigenous culture used it as a weapon on the battlefield. Most of the men who had been sworn to secrecy during the war kept those secrets as long as they lived. But their families and tribal communities remember.







Host Travis Zimmerman helps tell two stories: One about Lex Porter, an Ojibwe speaking code talker from Grand Portage and a member of the Fond du Lac band of Lake Superior Chippewa (Nagaajiwanaang); the other about Reuben St. Clair, a Dakota speaking coder talker from the Lower Sioux Indian Community (Mdewakanton).







The World War Two code talker program was declassified in 1968. The public learned about Navajo (or Diné) Marines who were deployed in the Pacific Theater. Then, in 2008, Congress passed the Code Talker Recognition Act to acknowledge other tribes whose languages had been used in the war. In 2013 it honored tribal leaders and families from 33 tribal nations. We'll never know the numbers of actual code talkers, but the stories they shared are still being told.







Special thanks:Gary Robinson at Tribal Eye ProductionsTravis Zimmerman, Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior ChippewaFreedom Porter, Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior ChippewaDarlene St. Clair, Lower Sioux Dakota OyateMoira (“meer ree”) Villiard (“vill-yerd”), Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior ChippewaAllison Waukau (“wah-kaw”), Menominee/NavajoLaurie Stern, producer







DeCoded is produced by Minnesota Native News & Ampers, Diverse Radio

28 分鐘

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