Without Indigenous code talkers in WW II, ‘we would be speaking German’

Mohawk code talkers and their missions were so vital during the Second World War, that some believe without them, there was no way of winning of the war.  

“Let’s put it this way, we would be speaking German or some other language if it weren’t for the Native code talkers,” said Mike Cook, commander of the American Legion Post 1479 of Akwesasne, N.Y.

Despite their importance, it was not until 2008, when the Code Talkers Recognition Act in the U.S. was passed, that Indigenous people’s contributions to the war effort were officially acknowledged. 

Cook, who has been retired from the Army reserve for 22 years, has worked with Veterans Affairs for years hosting clinics about benefits and healthcare, off and on-reserve on both sides of Akwesasne’s border.

Code talkers were often used as scouts — even though many were just teenagers, he said.

Vet stands beside monument w clans.
A monument to Mohawk veterans was built in Akwesasne, N.Y. in 2018. (Candace Maracle/CBC)

Usually in pairs, the scouts served on the forward lines. They would go out into the field being as inconspicuous as possible to get information.

“You tell them just how many people, what kind of insignia is on the shirt. Let them know what kind of outfit they’re up against…how large a group, what kind of weapons they’re using,” Cook said.

Coded Kanien’kéha messages transmitted these details to another Mohawk code talker via radio who would then share that information with his division. The soldiers created their own code — the Kanien’kéha word for eagle (á:kweks) could represent the word for gun (káhonre), for example — which would be translated to English.

He said this intelligence would be used to determine the rank and experience of the enemy to help strategize.

Code talker’s monument

Cook was on the committee to establish a monument dedicated to all of Akwesasne’s code talkers back in 2018.

“We really have nothing for the veterans like this with all the names,” he said, adding that the veterans cemetery is the only exception.

His efforts to research and honour his community’s Mohawk code talkers was not an easy task. Many of the men who served were sworn to secrecy by the American government, he said, and they never spoke about their clandestine missions overseas due to fears of repercussions.

Veterans pose together for a photo.
Mohawk code talker Levi Oakes was one of the only Mohawk code talkers to be recognized during his lifetime. Oakes is pictured centre walking with a cane. (Fenn Mayes/CBC)

“The code talkers we never knew we had …You’re told you’re under oath. You don’t tell nobody,” Cook said.

It wasn’t until the Veterans’ Oral History Project Act was passed in the U.S. in 2000, that veterans from his community seemed to feel secure enough to share the details of their missions, he said.

The last Mohawk code talker, Louis Levi Oakes, was 94 when died in 2019. He was one of 17 known code talkers from Akwesasne Mohawk Territory who served in the Second World War.

Oakes is the only Mohawk code talker to be recognized while he was alive. His service in the war was also well-documented. 

“Levi, you know, he was just a fisherman, a hunter and he was up there in age. He never said nothing to anybody,” Cook said.

Levi Oakes shaking hands w Prime Minister Trudeau.
Mohawk code talker Levi Oakes was welcomed to the House of Commons to meet with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. (Fenn Mayes/CBC)

“We honoured [Oakes] at a conference in Washington, and we took him to the airport, which was three hours from here and that guy talked like he was 20 years old. He told me where he enlisted, where he went,” he continued.

Oakes’ daughter, Dora, accompanied him to many ceremonies honouring his accomplishments in the Second World War.

She said her father never spoke about his military career.

The first time her father received recognition for his service was in 2016, when he was awarded a silver star “for gallantry in action against the enemy, the U.S. armed forces’ third-highest award.

“They should have did it 20 years earlier when a lot of these veterans could walk, get around and get honoured,” Dora said.

Woman holds old code talking book.
Dora Oakes accompanied her father to many of the ceremonies in honour of his code talking. (Fenn Mayes/CBC)

Alex Wilson Lazore, Mohawk code talker

Gerald Lazore, served in the 82nd Airborne Division, Army at Fort Bragg, N.C. He was a paratrooper and artillery repairman.

“With the outfit I was in, I didn’t know if I was going to go overseas or anywhere. You’re always on alert, so that was the life when you were a paratrooper,” he said.

Despite having a difficult time readjusting to civilian life after his two years of service, he said he was one of the lucky ones.

“I never went overseas. I got lucky. I didn’t go to Vietnam like my brother did.”

Bros sitting at table w WWII 42nd Division Handbook.
Brothers Gerald and Kenneth Lazore (L-R) both served in the Vietnam war. Their father was Mohawk code talker. Here they sit with his WW II 42nd Division Handbook. (Fenn Mayes/CBC)

Lazore’s older brother, Kenneth, did two tours of duty in Vietnam in 1967-68.

He said his memories of those tours are his alone and he’s buried them. When he reflects on it, Kenneth says it forced him to grow old before his time — like many of the men he served with.

During the war, people saw “too much,” he said.

“[In] ’68 I brought a cousin home. Shittiest friggin’ duty that I ever had…You go to a funeral, you stand by the casket, parents look at you,” Kenneth said, his voice cracking. “Why him?”

“Indian life is cheap,” he said.

Kenneth and Gerald’s father, Alex Wilson Lazore, was a Mohawk code talker who served in France in the Second World War. He died in his mid-70s before ever being recognized for his service. His son’s only learned he was a war hero after he died.

He enlisted, they said, because “money was tight back then.”

Soldier poses for picture wearing his uniform.
Alex Wilson Lazore, was a Mohawk code talker who served in France in WW II. He died before his family knew about his career in the military. (Fenn Mayes/CBC)

When he returned home, he went to work as a farmer and ironworker. Little else is known about his time in the military. 

Gerald echoed Dora’s sentiments about the lack of recognition his father received for his service as a war hero.

“They should have did this when all of them were still here, right?”

The brother still have their father’s 42nd Division WW II handbook, which has been carefully preserved. 

The handbook is the only known copy in their community, containing maps, Alex Wilson’s 42nd Division patch, the most recent updates regarding enemy stations in the war and notes on Allied military stations.

Much of the information is difficult to decipher by those who didn’t use the handbook themselves, Cook said while leafing through its contents and unfolding the maps.

After they die, the brothers said they plan to donate the book to the legion for its collection of memorabilia “so the whole community could come see what the men did here during WW II as code talkers.”

“They created their own words,” said Kenneth.

“When they passed away, they took them,” Gerald added.  

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