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Ira Hayes

The Akimel O'odham Warrior, World War II, and the Price of Heroism

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The gripping, forgotten tale of Ira Hayes—a Native American icon and World War II legend who famously helped raise the flag at Iwo Jima but spent the latter half of his life haunted by being a war hero.
IRA HAYES tells the story of Ira Hamilton Hayes from the perspective of a Native American combat veteran of the Vietnam generation. Hayes, along with five other Marines, was captured in Joe Rosenthal’s iconic photograph of raising the stars and stripes on Mount Suribachi during the battle for the Japanese Island of Iwo Jima. The photograph was the inspiration and model for the U.S. Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington. 
Between the time he helped raise that flag and his death—and beyond—he was the subject of more newspaper columns than any other Native person. He was hailed as a hero and maligned as a chronic alcoholic unable to take care of himself. IRA HAYES explores these fluctuating views of Ira Hayes. It reveals that they were primarily the product of American misconceptions about Native people, the nature of combat, and even alcoholism. Like most surviving veterans of combat, Ira did not think of himself as a heroic figure. There can be no doubt that Ira suffered from PTSD, which is a compound of survivor’s guilt, the shock of seeing death, especially of one’s friends, and the isolation brought on by feeling that no one could understand what he had been through. Ira’s life has been a subject of two motion pictures and a television drama. All these dramas sympathize with him, but ultimately fail to see his binge drinking as his way of temporarily escaping the melancholy, the rage he felt, his sense of betrayal, and the sheer boredom of peacetime. 
IRA HAYES breaks apart the complexities of Ira’s short life in honor of all Native veterans who have been to war in the service of the United States. This is equally their story.
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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2023
      Searching study of the psychically scarred Native American Marine Corps hero made famous for raising the American flag on Iwo Jima. "He received more press than Geronimo, Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, Cochise, and Tecumseh combined." So writes Holm, a Marine combat veteran of Vietnam and retired professor of American Indian studies, of Ira Hayes (1923-1955), caught both in Joe Rosenthal's iconic photograph and its replication in the Marine Corps War Memorial in Washington, D.C. Hayes was also caught in the maze depicted in the iconography of his Akimel O'odham people, its middle-way ideals disrupted by war; that maze found him suffering horribly from PTSD and the self-medication of alcohol. Although the Akimel O'odham were considered "a peaceful people," largely because they did not rise up against the American conquerors of their homeland, they had a tradition of warfare. However, writes the author "the Akimel O'odham way of war was a complex amalgamation of preparatory rituals, limited aggression, the ceremonial expungement of the pollution of death, healing, and the celebration of the return of the relatives who took part in the conflict." Thrust instead into boot camp, jungle warfare, the horrific battle for Iwo Jima, and unwonted fame for anchoring the six-man chain that raised the American flag over Mount Suribachi, Hayes returned to poverty on a reservation just a generation away from a horrible famine wrought by water-greedy white farmers in the Arizona desert. Hayes would say "that he wished the picture had never been taken," and after the war, adrift, he was at home nowhere. Holm argues that the "drunken Indian" image so often presented in popular culture is both false and demeaning. Some of his assertions are obvious--e.g., war is formative, scarring, and hellish--but he convincingly depicts Hayes as a gentle, unwilling "victim of circumstance" who coped with his troubled life the best he could. A strong contribution to the literature of World War II, Native American warriors, and the unseen wounds of war.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from August 1, 2023
      When Joe Rosenthal snapped his famous picture of Marines raising the American flag over Mount Suribachi on the island of Iwo Jima in 1945, he introduced a young Native American from Arizona named Ira Hayes to the world. Reluctant to embrace the title of hero given to him by the patriotic public, this veteran survivor of fierce fighting at Bougainville and Iwo Jima struggled with trauma from combat as well as from poverty and racism. Holm, a Native American scholar and military veteran of the Vietnam War, brings acute understanding to his reconstruction of Hayes' life and legacy. The book dives deeply into the Akimel O'odham people, their history, their relations with white Americans and the federal government, their traditions and beliefs, and the tribal identity that shaped Hayes' life. With grace, sympathy, and tact, Holm tackles both sides of the stereotype stamped onto Hayes' life by whites, the "super-scout" Native American warrior imbued with heightened senses and the unreliable "drunken Indian." This is the well-written and compelling biography Ira Hayes deserves, a hard-hitting portrait of a man whose image was distorted by Hollywood and who should have been treated with genuine respect and fairness after his service and sacrifice to a nation that wouldn't accept him or his people as full citizens.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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