Jim Huff


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In Honor and Dedication


Ira Hayes


ira

Ira and five others were the subject of a photo.This photo was the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima.This gave him a fame which he neither sought nor wanted.

In 1955 a song was recorded about Ira Hayes.I could not bring myself to put the lyrics here.They are much too offensive.The lyrics demonstrated an ugly prejudice that remains and runs rampant in this great nation today.

The Nation of Ira Hayes

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Ira Hayes

born January 12, 1923 Sacaton, Arizona

died January 24, 1955 Bapchule, Arizona

Ira was the son of Joe E. and Nancy W. Hayes. He was a Pima Indian.

When he enlisted in the Marine Corps, he had hardly ever been off the Reservation. His Chief told him to be an "Honorable Warrior" and bring honor upon his family.

Ira was a dedicated Marine. Quiet and steady, he was admired by his fellow Marines who fought alongside him in three Pacific battles.

When Ira learned that President Roosevelt wanted him and the other survivors to come back to the US to raise money on the 7th Bond Tour, he was horrified.

To Ira, the heroes of Iwo Jima, those deserving honor, were his "good buddies" who died there.

At the White House, President Truman told Ira, "You are an American hero." But Ira didn't feel pride. As he later lamented, "How could I feel like a hero when only five men in my platoon of 45 survived, when only 27 men in my company of 250 managed to escape death or injury?"

The Bond Tour was an ordeal for Ira. He couldn't understand or accept the adulation . . . "It was supposed to be soft duty, but I couldn't take it. Everywhere we went people shoved drinks in our hands and said 'You're a Hero!' We knew we hadn't done that much but you couldn't tell them that."

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Ira in later years . . .

Ira went back to the reservation attempting to lead an anonymous life. But it didn't turn out that way . . . "I kept getting hundreds of letters. And people would drive through the reservation, walk up to me and ask, 'Are you the Indian who raised the flag on Iwo Jima"

Ira tried to drown his "Conflict of Honor" with alcohol. Arrested as drunk and disorderly, his pain was clear . . . "I was sick. I guess I was about to crack up thinking about all my good buddies. They were better men than me and they're not coming back. Much less back to the White House, like me."

In 1954, Ira reluctantly attended the dedication of the Iwo Jima monument in Washington. After a ceremony where he was lauded by President Eisenhower as a hero once again, a reporter rushed up to Ira and asked him, "How do you like the pomp & circumstances?" Ira just hung his head and said, I don't."

Ira died three months later after a night of drinking. As Ira drank his last bottle of whiskey he was crying and mumbling about his "good buddies."

Tragically, Ira Hayes was not unlike many other young men who went to war in WWII. For the most part they had very little education, many of them being illiterate. For this reason very few were able to write about their experiences and, if no one else did, the experience was lost.

Ultimately,this unwanted fame was at least partially responsible for his death. An illiterate indian trying to live up to the image of a hero and knowing deep inside that what he had done was no more nor no less than that which was done by all of the other Marines on the island. Such a short, tragic life for one of God's creatures.

Ira's grave is located in Arlington Mational Cenetery,Va.

Jack Mills~ eyewitness account of Ira's funeral

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