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Author Viotte, Michel

Title Navajo warriors : the great secret / by Michel Viotte for Bonne Pioche
Published New York, NY : Filmakers Library, 2003

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Description 1 online resource (50 min.)
Series Filmakers Library online
Summary The famous Navajo Code Talkers, memorialized by Hollywood in the feature film "Windtalkers," were an integral part of the armed forces during World War II. Navajo veterans who fought in the Pacific in World War II, used their unwritten Native American tongue as an unbreakable code language, essential in the American military intelligence machine. Richard West, President, Museum of the American Indian, says, "Ironically, the U.S. military used the Native American language as a potent instrument of war although the government had prohibited [native] people from speaking their own language for almost a century."Successive generations of young Navajo men who fought in the elite division of the U.S. Marine Corps, relate their stories in this film. Vincent and his brother enlisted in the 1970s; his brother died in Vietnam. Benjamin, Calbert and Michael are currently training as Marines in San Diego. The film reveals how their strong Navajo cultural identity and spiritual references correlated with traditional Marine Corps values and a passionate patriotism
Audience For College; Adult audiences
Notes English
DVD version record
Subject United States. Marine Corps -- Indians
SUBJECT United States. Marine Corps fast
Subject Navajo code talkers.
Navajo Indians.
World War, 1939-1945.
Armed Forces -- Indian troops
Navajo code talkers
Navajo Indians
Genre/Form Documentary
Nonfiction films
Nonfiction films.
Films autres que de fiction.
Form Streaming video