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    Fort Bragg celebrates Native American Heritage

    Fort Bragg celebrates Native American Heritage

    Photo By Staff Sgt. April Campbell | The 82nd Airborne Division Commander Maj. Gen. John W. Nicholson Jr., center, and...... read more read more

    FORT BRAGG, NC, UNITED STATES

    11.15.2013

    Story by Staff Sgt. April Campbell 

    82nd Combat Aviation Brigade

    FORT BRAGG, N.C. – Fort Bragg celebrated Native American Indian heritage at the 82nd Airborne Division Chapel, Nov. 15.

    The United States recognized November as National Native American Indian Heritage Month in 1990. This year, the 82nd Combat Aviation Brigade organized and hosted Fort Bragg’s program to honor the American Indian culture.

    “It’s important for us to recognize the contributions of Native Americans to our history of the United States of America. Equally significant are the commitments and achievements of Native Americans in our Army,” said 82nd CAB Commander Mike Musiol.

    The program featured a traditional drum and dance performed by members of North Carolina’s Lumbee Tribe, a traditional storyteller, also from the Lumbee Tribe, and Dr. Jay Hansford Vest, of the University of North Carolina at Pembroke.

    Vest, a professor of American Indian Studies, emphasized the significance of Native Americans in the U.S. Military.

    Of approximately 3 million American Indians in the United States, nearly 150,000 are military veterans. The largest per-capita service to the United States military comes from Native Americans, said Vest.

    The stories of his parents, who were among this group of veterans, were passed on to Vest in the Native American tradition of oral storytelling.

    “I feel a great kinship to the airborne because of my father’s service. I was raised with the oral stories of his combat as a paratrooper in World War II,” Vest said. “It’s a great honor for me to even be here.”

    Such spoken stories have kept the professor and other Native Americans in touch with the legacies of their ancestors for many years.

    “Traditionally we were oral people, so we kept our stories alive one generation to the next by word of mouth,” Vest said.

    The college professor certainly did his part to share the legacy of his people with the troopers in the audience.

    “I hope that your sons and daughters will tell your stories for you,” Vest said. “As a warrior, you want that legacy passed on.”

    The heritage celebration was eye-opening for some Soldiers who attended.

    “The event helped me know more about the Native American history. I didn’t realize so many American Indians had served in the military with us,” said Spc. Hector Irizarry, of the 82nd CAB.

    Perhaps Irizarry and others who attended the observance will give thanks for their increased understanding of the country’s Native American heritage in a few weeks when they gather with their friends and families for the holiday.

    “It is fitting that we have this observance in the month of November with Thanksgiving less than two weeks away,” Musiol said. “It is an important tradition in this country.”

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.15.2013
    Date Posted: 11.26.2013 12:28
    Story ID: 117400
    Location: FORT BRAGG, NC, US

    Web Views: 238
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN