Native American soldiers have made important contributions during all U.S. wars. But during the two world wars, Indigenous languages became the basis of a secret communications strategy that stumped enemy intelligence—and proved essential to winning key battles.
It began in 1918, when three enlistees from the Choctaw nation deployed to France were overheard by an officer speaking their native language. It sparked an epiphany: That language, so unknown outside their own small nation—and without a long written history—could be perfect for secret coded communications. Choctaw soldiers were quickly utilized as "phone talkers," delivering messages via field telephones, during World War I. And while the conflict ended soon after, their work shaped military communications going forward. During World War II, the strategy encompassed more than a dozen Native languages, most notably Navajo. That work became known as "code talking."
Ironically, the U.S. military was drawing benefit from languages that the U.S. government had long been working to eradicate. As part of a broader campaign of forced assimilation, Native American children had for decades been pushed into boarding schools that forbade—and punished—them for speaking their home languages. Now, on the field of battle, those same languages were saving lives.
Serving a Nation That Had Tried to Eliminate Them
One of the so-called “Five Civilized Tribes” of the southeastern United States, the Choctaw traditionally farmed corn, beans and pumpkins while also hunting, fishing and gathering wild edibles. Despite allying themselves with the United States in the War of 1812, they were pressured afterward into ceding millions of acres of land to the government.
Following the passage of the Indian Removal Act in 1830, most members of the nation were then forced to relocate to present-day Oklahoma in a series of journeys that left an estimated 2,500 dead. In what would become a catchphrase for all Indian removal west of the Mississippi River, a Choctaw chief described it as a “trail of tears and death.”
When the United States entered World War I in April 1917, it had not yet granted citizenship to all Native Americans, and government-run boarding schools were still largely attempting to stamp out their languages and cultures. Nonetheless, several thousand Native Americans enlisted in the armed forces to fight the Central Powers. Nearly 1,000 of them representing some 26 tribes joined the 36th Division alone, which consisted of men from Texas and Oklahoma.
“They saw that they were needed to protect home and country,” said Judy Allen, senior executive officer of tribal relations for the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, “so they went to the nearest facility where they could sign up and were shipped out.”