The military's unsung Native American heroes

How one of Arizona's busiest color guards honors the Native Americans who fight to keep their homelands free

Marine Private First Class Ira Hayes illustrates the part he played in the raising of the flag at Iwo Jima.
(Image credit: RBM Vintage Images / Alamy Stock Photo)

On a sultry morning in late August, a group of middle school students, teachers, administrators, basket dancers, and bird singers converge on the Gila River Indian Community's sprawling reservation, just south of Phoenix. They've come to welcome a grizzled group of veterans as they dedicate a new flagpole at Skyline Gila River District 5's school in Bapchule.

By 8 a.m., the temperature has hit 80 degrees and is rising by the minute. At the south end of campus, green maize fields remind the students of their tribe's ancient agricultural heritage. The flagpole is surrounded by carved Kokopelli figures in each of the four sacred colors — black, red, yellow, and white — and a clay bowl reminiscent of Pima basketry.

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Debra Krol

Debra Utacia Krol is an award-winning Native American journalist who specializes in Native issues, environmental and science issues, and travel. She is an enrolled member of the Xolon (also known as Jolon) Salinan Tribe from the Central California coastal ranges. Her work has appeared in Indian Country Media Network, High Country News, Winds of Change Magazine (the journal of the American Indian Science and Engineering Society), the Official Arizona Visitors' Guide, and many other publications.