Choctaw Nation Honors Code Talkers Who Helped Turn the Tide in WWIChoctaw Nation Honors Code Talkers Who Helped Turn the Tide in WWI
The Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma dedicated a sculpture honoring the World War I code talkers in front of the Choctaw Nation Cultural Center in Durant, Okla., on May 22, 2025. The original code talkers were 19 Choctaw men who used their native language to help move units, coordinate operations, and relay vital information during the war. Michael Clements/The Epoch Times

Choctaw Nation Honors Code Talkers Who Helped Turn the Tide in WWI

Sculpture honors soldiers who used Native American languages to confound German intelligence efforts.
Updated:

In 1917, a Choctaw Indian named Joseph Oklahombi walked 21 miles from his home in Wright City, Oklahoma, to Idabel, the McCurtain County seat, to enlist in the U.S. Army.

Oklahombi enlisted at a time when most Native Americans were not considered U.S. citizens—that didn’t happen until the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924.

AD