Tim Giago: Boot camp etched forever into the minds of veterans

The following opinion by Tim Giago appears in the Native Sun News. All content © Native Sun News.


Tim Giago. Photo by Talli Nauman

Remembering ‘boot camp’ on Memorial Day
Delivered at the Black Hills National Cemetery in 2009
By Tim Giago

There is no greater honor than to be asked by my fellow veterans to make this address to you on this special day. I am truly humbled to be in the presence of so many Native American veterans who served this country with honor and distinction.

Looking out across the fields of white crosses and at the faces of those Indian warriors gathered here today to honor their own and knowing that every branch of the military is represented here, I am reminded of the one thing everyone of us has in common. Some of you call it basic training and some call it boot camp, but it is the one thing that will forever be etched into the minds of each and every veteran.

How many pushups did you have to do before you could shout out your serial number like you could your own name?

In 1951 when I enlisted in the United States Navy I was 17-years-old. Like many Indians I had just come from a boarding school where we had an obstacle course, we marched to and from church and other activities and we slept in dormitories. So that first week in boot camp was no big change.

Although many of us were familiar with, and some fluent, in our Native tongues, all of a sudden we had to learn a different language. It was the language every recruit strains to master in those first few weeks; the language of the military.

Instead of a wall there was a bulkhead and you didn’t go to the bathroom, you went to the head. There were no longer stairs to climb, you now climbed ladders. A door became a hatch and the ceiling became the overhead. There were no more windows, there were portholes. There was a fore and aft and on the wooden vessel known as the USS Recruit, there was a port and a starboard. A rope became a line and you didn’t use clothes pins to hang your clothing out to dry, you used clothe stops. You no longer walked on floors, you walked on decks and your shaving kit became a ditty bag. The soda fountain became a geedunk and the place you bought clothing became a small store. You didn’t just have a cigarette, but instead had to wait until you heard, “The smoking lamp is lighted in all authorized places.”

The Army, Air Force and the Marine Corps all had a language of their own, and the poor Marines, they not only had to learn the lingo of the Navy, they also had to learn the language that would transform them into Fighting Jarheads.

We all marched on a grinder, learned about reveille and taps and learned to stop whatever we were doing and stand at attention when the flag was raised or lowered.

And I do not believe there is a single veteran present here today that does not recall that special day, after we had survived several weeks of oftentimes brutal boot camp, that special day we donned our dress uniforms, formed company ranks, and marched in front of the reviewing stands on graduation day. When we passed the stands and the Drill Instructor shouted, “Eyes Right,” our heads snapped as one, and we looked at friends and family, and of course, all of the big brass, sitting in the bleachers cheering us on.

Those were the days every veteran in attendance here today recalls and these are the special memories most of us will carry with us to our graves.

Tim Giago, Oglala Sioux, is Editor Emeritus of Native Sun News.

Copyright permission Native Sun News

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