Navajo Code Talker Recalls Life Dedicated to Service Sacrifice

Navajo Code Talker Recalls Life Dedicated to Service Sacrifice

Navajo Code Talker Recalls Life Dedicated to Service, Sacrifice Veterans, Active Duty, and Military Families

Navajo Code Talker Recalls Life Dedicated to Service and Sacrifice

Thomas H Begay 94 is one of four surviving Code Talkers

Photo Courtesy of the IRS Since enlisting in the military at age 16 during World War II, Thomas H. Begay has dedicated his life to service and sacrifice for the United States.

4 surviving Navajo Code Talkers from World War II br

More than 400 Navajo men served as Code Talkers by the end of World War II. Today four are alive. • Thomas H. Begay, 94, originally from Chichiltah, New Mexico
• John Kinsel Sr., 100, from Lukachukai, Arizona
• Peter MacDonald, 92, from Tuba City, Arizona
• Samuel F. Sandoval, 98, from Shiprock, New Mexico The Navajo Code Talkers developed a coded Navajo language for radio communication in the Marine Corps. During the , Begay, who now lives in Window Rock, Arizona, transmitted hundreds of secret messages over the radio network. Japanese cryptographers never were able to break the code. Some 75 years later, the Code Talkers’ contributions still are revered for carrying the U.S. through World War II and the Korean War. Begay's stories from the line of duty offer a unique perspective to civilians and service members alike. "Veterans of all wars, I want to say, welcome home. Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan ... and today we still have many of our people serving to protect our country, to protect our freedom,” Begay said at a 2019 event honoring him.
All of Begay's children — three sons and a daughter — entered the service. His youngest was killed while deployed to Afghanistan.

Join today and save 25% off the standard annual rate. Get instant access to discounts, programs, services, and the information you need to benefit every area of your life. "We all need help with the veteran services,” he said. “It's very hard to find the right person to help you, to rehabilitate you, from serious wounds that you have received during the combat."
Begay said he grew up knowing little English and didn't begin to fully learn the language until he enrolled in school at age 13. He knew that he wanted to be in the military and was sent to Camp Pendleton, north of San Diego in Southern California, but he had not been aware of the secret program for Navajo speakers. "I told the sergeant the day when I arrived in October 1943, ‘Sir, I didn't sign up to be a Code Talker, I don't want to be a Code Talker. I don't know Navajo that much,’” Begay said. “‘Too bad,’ he says. ‘You have no place to go.’” Begay then realized that he had no alternative. National Archives Private First Class Preston Toledo (left) and Private First Class Frank Toledo, cousins and full-blooded Navajo Indians, attached to a Marine Artillery Regiment in the South Pacific with relay orders over a field radio in their native tongue. The Code Talker served on six combat missions before he was honorably discharged in 1953. He then served 40 years of federal service in the Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Indian Affairs.
"Many young men serving this area during the war, it is so hard,” Begay said. “Sometimes it makes you think back. A lot of things happen to our veterans." His son R.C. Begay said the key to his father's success began by being raised in the Navajo Nation. "He stuck to the basics of natural foods, hard work, being up early, just a basic way of life for a Navajo,” R.C. Begay said. “And I think that really helped him in the long run to navigate through life and who he is.” Editor's note: This article, originally published on Nov. 11, 2019, has been updated to reflect new information.

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