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Indigenous

Remembering a hereditary chief with a brilliant mind killed in action in France

In August 1944, Edward Clutesi of the Tseshaht First Nation was killed while fighting in the Battle of Normandy and the retaking of Caen. He is one of thousands of Indigenous people who fought for Canada and is remembered on National Aboriginal Veterans Day.

Edward Clutesi was 'a genius in spite of residential school, not because of it'

Edward Clutesi in shown his uniform. The Indigenous soldier died in northern France during the Second World War. (Submitted by Isobelle Clutesi)

A white gravestone in a Canadian war cemetery in northern Franceis all that remains of Edward Clutesi.

The stone in theBretteville-sur-LaizeCanadian War Cemetery near the city of Caen bears Clutesi's name, rank, military service numberandagewhen he was killed in the Second World War.

But whatit doesn't show is that the 26-year-oldwas Indigenous, a residential school survivor, heir to one of his nation's hereditary chieftainships and had a brilliant mind.

"He was a chief;he died as one. And he had a high IQ and wanted to become a chemist," said his surviving brother, Albert Clutesi, who instead inherited the title. "It would have really been something, I think, if he came back home."

The contributions of fallen Canadian soldiers are quietly remembered every Nov. 11 as The Last Post sounds at Remembrance Day ceremonies nationwide.

But the sacrifice ofIndigenous soldiers3,000 of whomenlisted in the Second World Waris often overshadowed.

Today marksNational Aboriginal Veterans Day, which was first observed in Winnipeg in 1994 as a way to separately honour Indigenous contributions to Canada's military service.

Stories like Clutesi's give a glimpse at thoseIndigenous soldiers killed in action and what they aspired to be.

'Whatever he did, he was good at it'

Edward John Clutesi was born on Aug. 12, 1918, one of nine children born to Mabel Yukum and Edward Clutesi, of the Tseshaht First Nation, in Port Alberni, B.C. Tseshahtis one of14 nations that make up the Nuu-chah-nulth people of western Vancouver Island.

Nicknamed "Fish," Clutesi didn't attend schooluntil age 10, when he was sent to theAlberniIndian Residential School.

"Mom went to residential school and she didn't like it, so she kept us out for as long as she could," said Albert.

Albert Clutesi says his brother, Edward, would have been a hereditary chief and a chemist if he returned home from war. Edward is buried in the Bretteville-sur-Laize Canadian War Cemetery near Caen, France. (Wawmeesh Hamilton)

Once in school, Clutesi quickly showed he was highly intelligent, excelling in science and mathematics, with an aptitude for geometry, algebra and trigonometry. Clutesi's hobbies also hinted at his intelligence:he played the guitar andviolin, and liked to sketch, drawing cartoon characters like Mickey Mouse perfectly.

"Whatever he did, he was good at it," Albert said.

Clustesi progressed rapidly, graduating from high school at age 20 in 1938. He continued his education afterward, taking a correspondence course in trigonometry.

"That's all he talked about:he was going to be achemist," Albert said. "He'd have finished university. He'd have been Dr.Clutesi."

'He didn't want our mother to know'

In 1943, a group of Canadian soldiers practising military drills near Tseshaht caught Clutesi's eye.He joined the Canadian Army soon after.

"It was like that saying in America at that time: Uncle Sam wants you," Albert said.

Edward Clutesi's personnel selection report says testing showed he had a 'very superior learning ability.' (Ancestry.com/Library and Archives Canada)

Albert himself was in residential school when Clutesi left for basic training, but he said he had a sense of foreboding for his brother.

"I didn't like it one bit. I used to read quite a bit about the war in magazines," Albert said. "A lot of [soldiers] got killed."

Clutesi was shipped overseas to Europe, thoughhe wrote his mother often. Albert later noticed something peculiar about one of his brother's letters.

"That letter told everythingwhat he did, [that] he's going to the front," he said. But then those details were crossed out."He didn't want our mother to know that he's going to the front. He didn't want to hurt her."

In August 1944, Edward Clutesi was killed in northern France while fighting in the Battle of Normandy andthe retaking of Caen, one of Canada's bloodiest engagements.But the operation also marked the beginning of the end of the Second World War.

A letter from Maj.-Gen. H.F.G. Letson to Edward Clutesi's mother about his death. (Ancestry.com/Library and Archives Canada)

Todayhis grave is among the nearly 3,000 Canadian soldiers buried inBretteville-Sur-LaizeCanadian War Cemetery.

Albert said he knew something was wrong when an army official came to hisresidential school to askhim where his mother was. She was away, working in Chilliwack, B.C.

She knew Edward was dead before being told, Albert recalls.

"She said he showed up on her wall as a bright light and that she knew what happened to him," hesaid. "He was her favourite son and she truly missed him after."

A niece's love

Albert's daughter,Isobelle,saidher father talked about his brother from time to time while she was growing up;she knew that Edward Clutesi was smart, and that he had beenkilled in the war.

"I remember being in the house my dad grew up in. I went up into his room and I saw military clothes and a hat that were his," she said. "I was small but it left a vivid memory."

Isobelle Clutesi shows a picture of a plaque commemorating her uncle, Edward Clutesi. The plaque is presently with another family member. (Wawmeesh Hamilton)

Knowing that her uncle was killed in the Second World War inspired Isobelle to join the army cadets when she was a teen. It meant something special to her.

"I celebrated Remembrance Day for my uncle. It did something for me as a young person," she said.

Isobellebelieves life would have been different had her uncle made it home.

"I think it would have really made a difference, growing up in our family, to have some role model in our life," she said.

A community's loss

Clutesi's academic accomplishments are remarkable because Indigenous people rarely graduated from high school during that time, said Tseshaht Councillor Luke George,an Indigenous advisor at PortAlberni'sNorth Island College who also served in the Canadian Army for eight years.

All the more remarkable, he said, is Clutesi's brilliance while in residential school.

"He was a genius in spite of residential school, not because of it."

For those Indigenous soldiers who returned from war, life was not easy: Manyfaced discrimination while also struggling with disenfranchisement,George said.

"But as a Tseshaht member and councillor, I'm proud of him for serving our country."