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Native Americans proud to serve country
Monday, November 10, 2003
"In the six years that I written about Native American veterans, I've been continually amazed by the number of Native American soldiers who fought, died, were injured or held prisoner in defense of this country.
I am astonished that, when drafted, Native people went to war with few complaints. Many joined the military and served the country well, too. There were Native Americans in all the wars; the Navajo code talkers had a significant role in the success of World War II, when they provided a way to send messages the enemy was unable to crack."
Get the Story:
DORREEN YELLOW BIRD COLUMN: Love of country spurs Native people to fight
(The Grand Forks Herald 11/8)
More Dorreen Yellow Bird:
Yellow Bird: Let's get serious about global
warming (11/03)
Yellow Bird:
The truth is scarier than fiction (10/28)
Yellow Bird: The spirit of the ancient Rainy
River (10/21)
Yellow Bird: This
year, I'm rooting for the hunters (10/20)
Yellow Bird: Introducing foreigner to
Indians (10/14)
Yellow Bird:
Enjoying another Indian Summer (10/13)
Yellow Bird: Sex and violence usually sells
(10/6)
Yellow Bird: Don't upset
natural flow of lake (09/30)
Yellow
Bird: Hog farm not as bad as I thought (9/29)
Yellow Bird: Indian pageants not judged on
looks (09/23)
Yellow Bird: It was a
good year for canning (09/16)
Yellow
Bird: 9-11 affected us 'to the very bone' (09/09)
Yellow Bird: Why are Indian students falling
behind? (9/8)
Yellow Bird: Owning a
home becomes more difficult (08/26)
Yellow Bird: Preserving culture through
language (08/25)
Yellow Bird:
Plants, planets and pies, oh my (08/19)
Yellow Bird: Time for gay rights has come
(8/18)
Yellow Bird: Ushering in a
new phase of life (8/13)
Yellow
Bird: Healing through ceremony (8/11)
Yellow Bird: Going fishing with good friends
(8/5)
Yellow Bird: My mother, the
great recycler (8/4)
Yellow Bird: Skin color doesn't
matter for group (7/28)
Yellow Bird: Those really long
Indian names (06/30)
Yellow Bird: Children's stories
getting better (6/24)
Yellow Bird: Not your average
bear adventure (6/17)
Yellow Bird: Preserving tribal
medicine (6/16)
Yellow
Bird: Nature's wonders in own back yard (6/10)
Yellow Bird: Public school
teachers deserve praise (6/9)
Yellow Bird: Where the land and
wind heal the soul (6/3)
Yellow Bird: Women should be
allowed to fight (6/2)
Yellow Bird: Rebate forms
difficult but addictive (5/27)
Yellow Bird: Indian Country
tourism could work (5/27)
Yellow Bird: Dragonflies
important to Natives (5/20)
Yellow Bird: This year, a sad
Mother's Day (05/12)
Yellow Bird: Crazy Horse monument
worthy task (5/6)
Yellow Bird: The good SPAM and
the bad spam (5/5)
Yellow Bird: Black Hills hurt by
urban sprawl (5/1)
Yellow Bird: My mother, at the
final chapter (04/22)
Yellow Bird: Taxes, bills and
orange peels (4/21)
Yellow Bird: Sacred ceremonies
are not a business (4/15)
Yellow Bird: Indian child welfare
act a necessity (4/14)
Yellow Bird: Pow-wow crosses
cultural lines (4/8)
Yellow Bird: An Indian guide to
Lewis and Clark (4/7)
Yellow Bird: Columnist 'put his
foot in his mouth' (4/1)
Yellow Bird: Events help teach
about Native culture (3/31)
Yellow Bird: Native people are
never unpatriotic (3/25)
Yellow Bird: All is still not
equal for women (03/17)
Yellow Bird: Enough of the cold
already! (3/11)
Yellow
Bird: Don't cut funds for the elderly (3/10)
Yellow Bird: Mister Rogers was
like an elder (3/3)
Yellow Bird: Worries have changed
in U.S. capitol (2/25)
Yellow Bird: Great-grandfather
Little Sioux (2/24)
Yellow Bird: Unity needed in
journalism too (2/18)
Yellow Bird: Finding peace in
uncertain times (2/17)
Yellow Bird: Astronauts were
elite, courageous (02/04)
Yellow Bird: Through diversity
comes unity (2/3)
Yellow Bird: We're cold and proud
of it (1/28)
Yellow
Bird: It could have been anyone (01/14)
Yellow Bird: Deer encounters,
Part 2 (1/13)
Yellow
Bird: Listen up roaming deer! (1/7)
Yellow Bird: Looking past
stereotypes (1/6)
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