They tried to kill his language, his culture. Canada tried to take everything. Still, he signed up to fight for Canada.

Checker Tomkins became a secret weapon.
England, 1942.

The Americans are looking for Canadian soldiers fluent in Cree to create a new means of transmitting secret messages.

Armed with the words of his grandparents, Checker implements a code never broken by the Nazis.
Attached to U.S. Eighth Army Air Force, Checker transmits messages about troop movements, supply lines, and bombing runs.

Some words didn’t exist in Cree, so he improvised.

Spitfire = iskotew "fire"
Mustang = pakwatastim “wild horse"
B17 = amo tepakohposâp “bee"
In Canada, priests and nuns punished children for speaking Cree.

Checker's brother, Frank, told their father about the abuse. School staff found out and beat Frank.

Please read about what happened in that place Canada called school: ehprnh2mwo3.exactdn.com/wp-content/upl…
Despite Canada trying to take everything from them, Checker and his brothers signed up to fight for Canada.

As veterans, they didn’t receive the same benefits as others.
Sworn to secrecy about his code talking, he told his family just a few years before his death. When word spread about his role, the Smithsonian asked to interview him.

Smithsonian: “How would you describe yourself?”

Checker: “I am a nice-looking man!”
“I love my country and I’ve done everything they asked me to do."
Please understand what he endured.
Please understand what he survived.

The Second World War. Canada.

Please remember Charles “Checker” Tomkins.
"He was a great man, gave his heart.”

Remember the Cree Code Talker.

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More from @CAFinUS

22 Sep
On D-Day, he wrote to the families of men killed by his side. In July, he stepped on a mine, earned the Legion d'honneur. He jumped into Arnhem, swam across the Rhine to escape.

He never forgot the liberation, the letters.

Charles Scot-Brown died Saturday.

Please remember him.
Charles was one of 673 Canadian officers who volunteered for service with British regiments.

He was a fresh-faced 20-year-old officer staring at his Sergeant who had three medals for bravery.

How would he win him over?
By darning socks. Obviously.
Read 10 tweets
10 Sep
They were halfway to America when the pilot made an announcement.

“We’ll be landing in Gander, Newfoundland.”

What? Why? Where’s Gander? Newfoundland?
They were on their way home from family trips or military deployments. Others were heading to fashion shows, make-a-wish trips, or business meetings, some to new lives in America.

6,700 people from 95 countries.

The Plane People.
Imagine that moment over the Atlantic.

You don’t have a smartphone or in-flight WiFi. When you land in Gander, information trickles in.

U.S. airspace closed. Planes hijacked.
New York City. The Pentagon. Pennsylvania.

What next? Where next?
You look around. Who next?
Read 14 tweets
2 Sep
September 2, 1945.

Officials gather aboard the USS Missouri to sign this document and end the Second World War.

Canada’s signature is missing? No. Look closely. We signed on the wrong line.
Everyone was watching.

It was quite the scene.
Who would make such a blunder?

Well, it could've been anyone, really. We've all done it. Okay, maybe not on an Instrument of Surrender.

This blunder's all Colonel Lawrence Moore Cosgrave.
Read 12 tweets
7 Aug
When Alex Decoteau lay dead on a battlefield in Belgium, an enemy sniper stole his most prized possession.
After he survived Battleford Industrial School, Alex moved to Edmonton and became Canada’s first Indigenous police officer.
He won several races and earned a spot on the Canadian Olympic Team.

He finished sixth in the 5,000 metres at the 1912 #Olympics in Stockholm.
Read 10 tweets
5 Aug
Back in Canada, if you don’t take out the trash, Bert Raccoon might show up with his friends and then you’ll really have problems. Anyway, our folks recently took care of some explosives that were laying around since the Second World War.
In September and November 1942, German U-boats sank four cargo ships near the coast of Newfoundland. More than 60 men perished in the attacks.

The ships carried ammunition, which went down with them. The ships still rest on the bottom of Conception Bay.
This unexploded ordnance poses a threat to divers and marine life, so our folks went to dispose of it properly.
Read 6 tweets
2 Aug
During the Siege of Québec, William Brown made Joe stand watch for him.

When Joe tried to escape, Brown posted ads like this one. Jailed six times and flogged twice, Joe never stopped fighting for his freedom.

William Brown enslaved Joe in Canada.
"Slave owning was widespread... People who enslaved Black persons included government and military officials, disbanded soldiers, Loyalists, merchants, fur traders, tavern and hotel keepers, millers, tradesmen, bishops, priests and nuns."
thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/bla…
August 1 is Emancipation Day back in Canada. On this day 187 years ago, the Slavery Abolition Act came into effect.

But racism, discrimination, and intolerance remained. It remains still.
Read 12 tweets

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