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Navajo code talker passes on at 90


Dustbuster

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FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. (AP) — A Navajo Code Talker, whose words are inscribed on congressional medals given to his group and who fought to have a World War II comrade recognized for his service, died Thursday in New Mexico.

Wilfred Billey died at his home in Farmington following a short illness, said his daughter, Barbara. He was 90.

He was one of hundreds of Navajo Code Talkers who stumped the Japanese during World War II by relaying messages in their native language.

But Barbara Billey said her father never considered himself a hero.

“Whenever he talked about the military during that time, he always told people that heroes were the ones he left behind, that he was not a hero,” she said. “That everybody pitched in, including the people in the states, the people in the military.”

After the war, Billey worked with New Mexico’s congressional delegation to come up with the words appearing along the bottom of the medals: “Dine Bizaad Yee Atah Naayee’ Yik’eh Deesdlii” or “The Navajo language was used to defeat the enemy,” his family said.

Billey and others stepped in when a former Code Talker, David Tsosie, was taken off the list of honorees in 2001 because his discharge papers did not note he was part of the group. They notified government officials and provided documentation.

When former Sen. Jeff Bingaman called Tsosie at a nursing home to tell him he would receive the belated medal, Billey was there. “Both of them just about jumped out of their seats with joy,” said James Preminger, who covered the story for the Farmington Daily Times.

“He’s one of those guys that you meet who is older, who you say, ‘Boy, I wish that guy was my uncle.’ He was such a humanitarian,” said Preminger, now a spokesman for a northwestern New Mexico school district where Billey worked.

Billey’s path to becoming a Code Talker started while he was attending the Navajo Methodist Mission School. The superintendent learned that the U.S. Marine Corps was looking for Navajo radiomen to follow in the footsteps of 29 other Navajos who had developed a code based on their native language. Billey volunteered in 1943 because he wanted to be with friends who were enlisting, Barbara Billey said.

He fought in battles at Tarawa Atoll, Saipan, Tinian and Okinawa with the all-Navajo 297th Platoon, part of the 1st Battalion in the 2nd Division.

Billey was discharged as a corporal in 1946, finished high school and earned bachelor’s and master’s degrees from New Mexico Highlands University in Las Vegas, N.M., according to his family. He served as a counselor, teacher and principal in northwestern New Mexico. He spent the latter part of his life ranching, farming, fighting for his tribe’s right to water from the San Juan River basin and sharing the story of the Code Talkers.

- See more at: http://americanmilitarynews.com/2013/12/famous-navajo-code-talker-dies-age-90/#sthash.CW3V5Eke.dpuf


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 2 of course it ate my spelling.
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These guys were heroes, every time I saw the movie wind talker it brought a tear to my eye. These guys were so vital to our effort in the pacific. I had the honor of meeting one of these heroes @ 10 years ago while working out west.We talked for an hour. It is still one of the most valued conversations I've had with anyone in my life..


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 2 of course it ate my spelling. Edited by Dustbuster
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Given the controversial treatment of Native Americans during the formation of our country, it's unbelievable that these great men sacrificed (some ultimately) so much to provide such valuable wartime efforts. God rest another great soul.
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Guest TankerHC

I have met a lot of hero's in my life, real hero's, including Navajo Code Talkers, including Mr Billey, the stories I heard right from their mouths were about as harrowing as it gets. This makes 3 of the four I have met gone in the last 12 months. Two of the three, I am told, in this photo of them at our VFW post, as well as our Post Commander, a member of a WWII Crash Crew in the Pacific, gone. (At least I was told he was gone and he is no longer the Post Commander, last time I spoke with him he had lung cancer and was already over 90)

 

DSCF0436.jpg

Edit: searching around looks like of the ones I met Bill Toledo is the only one still living depending on which site you go to. He is either still living or he died last month. It also apears Joe Vendever died last year. 

 

Was reading last month that there are only a million and a half WWII Vets left. Few more years and we will be doing what they did for Civil War Vets in the 40's, looking for the last survivor. 

Edited by TankerHC
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