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Tseshaht Hereditary Chief Edward Clutesi died in battle in WWII, but his legacy lives on

Tseshaht Hereditary Chief Edward Clutesi died in battle in WWII, but his legacy lives on

CBC
Friday, November 08, 2024 01:36:03 PM UTC

Edward John Clutesi was killed in battle on Aug. 29, 1944, according to a letter to his mother from the Canadian Forces. 

He was 26 years old. 

"That's young," Tseshaht Hereditary Chief Josh Goodwill said. "I'm 35, and I feel young. When I finally started … figuring out what I wanted to do with my life, I was like 25, 26. And he was over there doing big battles and fighting a war that I don't think I could handle at my age now. That's a very young age for someone to go over and put themselves in a situation like that."

Clutesi was one of thousands of Indigenous soldiers who served in the Canadian military in both the First and Second World Wars. He's also one of about 3,000 soldiers buried at Bretteville-Sur-Laize Canadian War Cemetery, the final resting place for casualties of the later stages of the Battle of Normandy. 

Though Clutesi didn't make it home, his memory and legacy live on through stories shared by loved ones and family members working to preserve the Tseshaht language. 

Goodwill is one of the Tseshaht First Nation's hereditary chiefs, but he also happens to be Clutesi's brother's grandson. 

"The first stories my grandfather shared were about his older brother going to war," he said. 

"He talked about the moment he realized that his brother didn't make it home."

His grandfather, Albert Clutesi, was in residential school at the time; Goodwill said a police car came to the school, looking for help finding Albert and Edward's mother. 

"When they said that he knew it was about his brother, his brother was probably gone."

Edward Clutesi had also attended residential school, and despite having been forced to attend, he chose to serve the country in wartime, a move Goodwill said was probably inspired by his community. 

"I think he thought about his family. I think he thought about his younger brother, my grandfather Albert, and the life that they could potentially live if he didn't put himself forward and put himself in that situation," Goodwill said. 

"I'm pretty sure he probably thought about making sure that his community is safe and protected."

Today, Goodwill is one of several Tseshaht members working to learn and teach their traditional c̓išaaʔatḥ (Tseshaht) language.

Read full story on CBC
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