Above, the Navajo Code Talker statue in Window Rock, Arizona. Photo by Armand Vaquer. |
In recent years, the famed Native American (Navajo) code talkers used during World War II have been receiving much recognition.
It has come to light that a Japanese photographer has been chronicling the code talkers' lives since then.
Kyodo News reported:
Until the 1960s, few knew of a special unit of Navajo code talkers in the U.S. Marine Corps who helped ensure the secrecy of U.S. military communications in the Pacific theater during World War II.
For the past several decades, however, their story has been chronicled by a photographer from Japan, the country with which they were at war, who has not only celebrated their pivotal wartime contributions but also shed light on the complex legacy of cultural suppression they endured.
The young Native American men experienced combat in several battles including the Battle of Okinawa, which raged for nearly three months until June 1945 and is widely considered the war's bloodiest conflict in the Pacific theater.
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