[Congressional Record Volume 168, Number 92 (Thursday, May 26, 2022)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2732-S2735]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TRIBUTE TO MIKE LIVINGSTON AND GERTRUDE SVARNY
Mr. SULLIVAN. Madam President, it is Thursday, and it is the time of
the week that I like to celebrate an amazing person or people in my
State who are doing something great for Alaska, great for America,
great for the world. It is someone I like to refer to as our Alaskan of
the Week--or Alaskans of the Week, plural.
So we are doubling up this week because we have two Alaskans that we
are going to be commemorating. And I want to acknowledge it has been a
couple of rough weeks for America--we all know that--for reasons that
are quite obvious. Some tempers here in the Senate have been flaring a
little bit. So I wanted to end the week on what is really an
incredible, uplifting story, an epic story. It is a bit complicated, so
you have to pay attention if you are wanting to hear about just a
remarkable course of events in Alaska.
And it is a particularly poignant story as we head into Memorial Day
weekend, a time when we honor those who have made the ultimate
sacrifice. And I am going to tell, as I mentioned, a very special
Memorial Day story--a
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complicated one, but one for the history books.
This story has twists and turns, dark spots, highlights, and
literally a Hollywood ending, one that involves a hero who gave his
life for America, what we are celebrating on Monday, but whose heroism
and service was only recently acknowledged and even only recently
remembered.
So, first, I am going to begin the story about a young man who made
the ultimate sacrifice for our Nation, an Alaskan native, an indigenous
man from Unalaska--Private George Fox.
Now, Private George Fox is not our Alaskan of the Week, but the whole
story that I am going to tell revolves around Private George Fox, who
was killed in action fighting Nazis in World War II in Italy in 1944
and, since 1949, was buried on the island of Unalaska--that is out on
the Aleutian island chain in Alaska, the islands way out that go out
towards Japan. But he was buried in an unmarked grave and essentially
forgotten--no record of military service, no awards for heroism,
nothing, forgotten by literally almost everybody but one person, for
nearly 80 years.
I am also going to talk about two very special people who are our
Alaskans of the Week; that is Mike Livingston and Gertrude Svarny, who
worked over the years to make sure that Private George Fox's
exceptional service is finally going to be officially recognized. And
that will happen Monday, on Memorial Day on the island of Unalaska in
the Aleutian Island chains back home in Alaska in a ceremony that will
take place on Monday.
So, as you can tell, this is actually a story of three people: one of
them a young soldier killed in action for our country in World War II;
one of them a still-living 90-year-old woman, a childhood friend of the
young soldier, one of our Alaskans of the Week, Gertrude; another, a
man on a mission, a detective with a public servant's heart.
It is a story of the invasion of the United States by the Japanese.
Many Americans don't know that Japan invaded parts of Alaska. It is a
story of racism, discrimination, service, honor, heroism. It is the
story of how two people worked to keep history alive and to honor
another who was forgotten for his heroism fighting and dying for our
country.
It is an epic of Alaska--an epic of Alaska--fitting to be
memorialized here on the U.S. Senate floor, and, more importantly,
memorialized Monday when we honor our veterans and those who died in
the service of our country.
So, it is a little complicated, but bear with me. Let me start this
remarkable story in a remarkable place.
This is Unalaska on the Aleutian Island chain. So if you are looking
at a map of Alaska, the Aleutian Islands go way out west, actually the
Aleutian Islands cross the international date line, way further west
than Hawaii. The Aleutian Island chain of Unalaska is a beautiful
island about 800 miles southwest of Anchorage in the Bering Sea. It is
home to walruses and sea lions; tens of millions of birds migrate
through the area.
Right now, it is the largest fishing port in the country, and it is
home to an incredible group of patriotic people, the Unangan native
people, living in an area steeped in fascinating and sometimes very
tragic history.
So here is a short version of that history. First, when Alaska was a
colonial possession of Russia, Russian fur seekers decimated the
Aleuts, the native populations on these islands, through warfare,
disease, even slavery.
Then, 75 years after the United States purchased Alaska from Russia,
during World War II, Japan actually bombed Unalaska, June 3 and 4,
almost 80 years ago today.
Then the Japanese invaded and occupied nearby islands on Alaska's
Aleutian Island chain. Many Americans don't know that history.
The United States--Alaska--was actually occupied by our enemy,
Imperial Japan. Eventually, American forces had to drive out the
Japanese in a brutal campaign on the Aleutian Islands area. About 1,500
American servicemembers were killed in those battles, 600 missing, and
almost 3,500 wounded in action.
So that is some of the history of Unalaska and the Aleutian Islands
chain during World War II.
So, George Fox--at about the same time the Japanese were literally
bombing his hometown of Unalaska in 1942, George Fox had volunteered as
a patriotic young American Alaska Native to fight for his country and
was sent to the other side of the world--Europe, North Africa.
Now, we don't know a lot about Private Fox's service, but because of
the work of Mike Livingston, our other Alaskan of the Week, who is
alive and doing great, we do have some basic information.
Here is some of what we know about Private George Fox. He was born
January 20, 1920, in Unalaska--again, the Aleutian island that we are
taking about on the Aleutian Islands chain. When he was 22 years old,
like so many patriotic Alaska Natives, he signed up to serve his
country in World War II.
By the way, it should be noted and cannot be overstated that
throughout history, even though so many Alaska Natives were
discriminated against--and still are in some ways--Alaska Natives,
certainly in Unalaska but all throughout the whole State, have served
at higher rates in the military than any other ethnic group in the
country--incredible patriotic service.
So Private George Fox from Unalaska goes to war for his country in
World War II. At the same time, his hometown is being bombed by the
Japanese. He was assigned to Company G in the 179th Infantry Regiment
of the 45th Infantry Division. His unit was first sent to fight the
Axis Powers in North Africa, then to Italy, where he landed in Italy on
Anzio Beach--a very famous battle--to fight the Germans in the famous
Battle of Anzio, where roughly 7,000 Allied servicemembers were killed
in action.
He survived that and fought his way heroically toward Rome, fighting
the Nazis the whole way. Unfortunately, on June 1, 1944, a Nazi bomb
exploded near him, and he was killed in action as a young American
serving his country--killed in Italy.
He is the only known Alaska Unangan from his region to be killed in
action during World War II.
So about 5 years later, after the war, his remains were removed from
Italy and returned to Unalaska in 1949. We now know there was a small
funeral at the Russian Orthodox church, where his ashes were buried
next to his mom, but his grave was unmarked--unmarked--and it stayed
unmarked for decades.
Now, that is what we know about Private Fox's military service, not
much else. Why? Because there was a fire where all his military records
were in the lower 48, and his service records were destroyed. So,
frankly, his record in the military was essentially forgotten--
forgotten.
Now, I think--you can't prove this, but the fact that he was Alaska
Native--that there was probably some discrimination here, like, ``Hey,
whatever, he is Alaska Native. We are not that worried.'' And so nobody
in authority kept his memory alive, his service alive. It was all
forgotten, that he was even a soldier.
So his memory and his service and his heroism--because these are
serious battles in World War II--all faded almost completely to
nothing, if it wasn't for our heroic Alaskans of the Week that we are
recognizing today.
So enter our first Alaskan of the Week, Mike Livingston, also a
Native Alaskan, Unangan, and he was determined to remember this vague
memory of this guy he had heard about, Private George Fox.
Here is a little bit of Mike's story, which is another great story.
He was born in Cold Bay, AK, which is another island in the Aleutian
Islands chain. He moved to Unalaska, the town we are talking about, in
1978, as a college student to learn the art of building traditional
kayaks from the Native elders in the community, and he began to work as
a public safety officer.
From then until 2003, when he retired, he was an emergency medical
technician, a firefighter, a dive rescue specialist, a police officer,
a detective in various places throughout Alaska, much of it in
Anchorage at the Anchorage Police Department, and he is currently a
captain with the Alaska State Defense Force.
Along the way--now, this guy is really impressive, what Mike did. He
received a master's degree in anthropology and a doctorate in
education,
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all of which he uses as a specialist in his job, also at the Aleutian
Pribilof Island Association, and he uses his education and skills also
as a detective and fuels his passion for helping people help solve
mysteries, particularly in his interest of genealogy and family trees
that involve stories that are untold mysteries. A tree nut--a family
tree nut--he calls himself, as do his group of friends who dig deep to
solve puzzles, the kind of which involve people, historic places,
lapses in historic knowledge that have faded into history, which is
exactly what happened to Private George Fox.
Around 2005, Mike Livingston, our Alaskan of the Week, and his
friends started to take on that mission. What happened to Private
George Fox? They had heard about him--a fellow Alaska Native who they
knew from stories was killed in action fighting somewhere in World War
II--but they needed more information. Where was he buried? Nobody
seemed to know. Why was he not listed as killed in action in service in
World War II?
In the U.S. military, when a servicemember is killed in action, the
survivors get benefits, and they are entitled to receive full military
honors at funerals.
And in Mike's culture and in Private Fox's culture--the Unangan
culture--when a warrior died protecting their village, statues were
carved, songs were written and sung. It has always been a huge honor in
the Native culture to be a fallen warrior, but Private George Fox got
none of this from America, from his Federal Government, and even from
the amazing Alaska Native people.
Mike Livingston, the detective with a servant's heart, wanted to
right this wrong. He wanted to do it for Private Fox, for his
community, for his people, for his State, for his country. So he got to
work on this mystery. He began to dig deeper.
He called every Federal Agency he could think of to try to get more
information about this mysterious Alaska Native whose memory had faded,
whose heroism wasn't recognized. But Mike ran into brick wall after
brick wall calling Federal Agencies. He was able to get a few tidbits,
like the basic information mentioned above, and he also discovered that
George Fox's remains were returned to Unalaska in 1949, but nothing
else--little else.
The mystery of where those remains were--in a grave, an unmarked
grave; where Private George Fox was buried--it haunted Mike Livingston.
As he said, ``When you compare some of what occurred during World War
II, or shortly after World War II, people who were white were highly
honored,'' he recently told a reporter, particularly if they were
killed in action during the war--but not so for so many Alaska Natives.
Eventually, Mike heard that another resident on the island--now we
are back on Unalaska--had a piece of the puzzle, a woman who happened
to be related to Mike through marriage.
Enter our second Alaskan of the Week, 91-year-old artist Gertrude
Svarny. Let me spend a few minutes talking about her incredible
patriotic story.
Gertrude was born in 1930 on Unalaska, the island out in the Aleutian
Islands chain, the island bombed by the Japanese. She was also Alaska
Native.
Her family lived next to the Fox family. George Fox was about 8 years
older than she was. George and Gertrude's older brother were good
friends. So Gertrude remembers George. She said the whole island loved
him. He was kind, funny, full of life, and obviously brave.
As I mentioned, in 1942, George Fox left to go fight World War II for
our great Nation, right at the time George and Gertrude's village,
Unalaska, was bombed by the Japanese.
And here is another story most Americans don't know about. After that
happened, the U.S. Government took the Alaska Native people on the
Aleutian Islands chain and put them into internment camps--not White
people, only Alaska Native people.
The treatment of these great patriotic American citizens in these
camps is a dark spot in American history that, as I mentioned, not many
Americans are aware of. Camps were basically abandoned buildings. The
conditions were awful--crowded, unheated, unsanitary. Many died in the
camps as a result of these horrendous conditions.
Three years later, when the war was finally over, the people of
Unalaska--the Native people of Unalaska--were allowed to go home to
their community after being in these internment camps, but their homes
were ransacked and burned. Many of their villages on the island were
destroyed, another dark spot in our country's history.
Remember, these were our citizens, our country, and the Native
people, if they weren't at home, many of them were fighting overseas in
the Pacific and in Europe, like Private George Fox.
So Gertrude comes home from the internment camp. She is at Unalaska
now, and she marries another patriot named Sam Svarny, her husband, who
was in the Army, originally from Chicago, and he was stationed in
Unalaska. Another patriot in this story, Sam served in World War II and
later served in Vietnam.
Gertrude became an artist--a renowned artist in Alaska. She is
actually very famous for her work that she makes out of traditional
materials, and she is in collections all over the world.
And even though her childhood was marked by the wrongs inflicted on
her family and her by her own country, she and her husband have
remained fiercely patriotic. Even interment hasn't dissuaded the
patriotism of the Alaska Native people. And one of the ways Gertrude
displayed this patriotism, which still burns in her to this day--
remember, she is 91 years old--was that every Memorial Day, they put
flags on the grave sites on the island of Unalaska to those who served
in the military.
Gertrude and her husband Sam always remembered when she was a young
girl the small service that she had attended, a funeral service in
1949, of the young, spritely teenager George Fox, a friend of
Gertrude's who died fighting the Nazis more than 5,000 miles away from
Alaska in Italy.
The service was in the winter, she remembers. It was very cold. After
the service, the small procession walked in the frigid winds to the
cemetery where George Fox's mother was buried.
So, every year, this patriotic Alaska Native woman, for decades, has
quietly visited the unmarked grave of Private George Fox to place a
flag on this unmarked grave to remember his service, and that is the
only living memory of what this young patriotic Alaska Native soldier
did for his country.
When her husband Sam passed away in 2014, Gertrude continued this
tradition even to this day, as I mentioned, at 91 years old. What a
patriot.
So here is how it all comes together. When our detective, another
Alaskan of the Week, Mike Livingston, finally learned that his own
relative through marriage, Gertrude, actually knew where Private Fox
was buried, he got to work. The mystery was coming together. He felt
like he had enough information to make the official case to the U.S.
Government to finally get Private George Fox, this American hero,
recognized.
He wrote up an affidavit. Gertrude signed it, stating how she had
been putting a flag on the unmarked grave site for decades. But still,
request after request was ignored by the U.S. Government.
So what did they do, Mike and Gertrude? Well, to all Americans and
Alaskans watching this, here is what they did. They called their U.S.
Senator.
This was now in 2020, at the height of COVID. When my office heard
about this, my former head of casework, Rachel Bylsma, got immediately
onto the case. We all said that this is so important to make sure
Private George Fox got the honor and recognition he deserved. So we
worked together.
And I am proud to say, he is going to be getting that recognition.
Here is what is going to happen on Unalaska in the Aleutian Island
chain this Monday, 2022 Memorial Day for America: The top military
officials in my State, so many members of Private George Fox's family,
so many members of the community, myself, and my team are going to
gather in Unalaska, and we are going to gather to honor a warrior, a
hero, an Unangan Alaskan, an American, on Memorial Day.
Gertrude will be there, and Mike will be there, our two Alaskans of
the Week. Hundreds of people will be there. There will be a procession
from the
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Russian Orthodox church to the cemetery, and we have now a beautiful 4-
foot-high gravestone to be unveiled.
Taps will float from a bugle. There will be a 21-gun salute from the
4th Brigade of the 25th Infantry Division. And on Memorial Day in
Unalaska, in the Bering Sea, the man who fought and died in World War
II as a hero for his country in North Africa, in Italy on Anzio Beach,
this American hero who has been forgotten will be recognized because of
the work of so many but, in particular, the relentless work of our
Alaskans of the Week Mike Livingston and Gertrude Svarny.
Private George Fox's service and sacrifice and heroism will finally
be recognized on Memorial Day by our Government, and we will have a
gravestone befitting of his incredible patriotic service.
On that gravestone, which I have seen--it is beautiful--at the bottom
there will be engraved three words. These words came from George Fox to
his family in his last letter that he wrote from Anzio Beach in a
heroic battle a world away from Alaska when he was fighting to save the
soul of the world from tyranny. There are three words in that letter--
that are now on a gravestone--that meant so much then and, I would
argue, mean so much now for our country to this very day. The three
words on that headstone are ``Wish all love.'' ``Wish all love.'' The
last words of a patriotic Alaska Native, sent home from Italy to his
family, who on Memorial Day will finally be recognized due to the
heroic, relentless hard work of our two Alaskans of the Week, Mike and
Gertrude. Thank you for all you are doing, all you have done for your
community, for your State, and for your country.
Thank you to George Fox's family and to Private George Fox for his
incredible service.
I look forward to seeing you all in Unalaska in a few days. It is
going to be a great ceremony. Congratulations on being our Alaskans of
the Week as we head into Memorial Day weekend.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Warnock). The Senator from Maryland.
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