Mr. Shay was a 19-year-old medic on D-Day at the landing on Omaha Beach. He won the Silver Star for his efforts to save wounded men in the water by turning them over, grabbing them under their shoulders, and dragging them through the waves up to the beach. He served with the troops at the battle of Hurtgen Forest and the Battle of the Bulge. He was captured by the Germans and liberated in April 1945.
Mr. Shay was a member of the Penobscot Tribe in Maine. When he tried to vote in 1945, wearing his uniform with the Silver Star, he was turned away. Maine did not allow Indians to vote in federal elections until 1954 and state and local elections until 1967.
Until 1967.
I’d like to think that the days of discrimination against Indians are over, but last night I saw an interview with an Indian woman was in the cast of the recent streaming drama entitled “Dark Winds.” She showed the I.C.E. agents her tribal I.D. card, but the agents said that didn’t count. She was arrested. Where the fuck are you going to deport an American Indian to?
Mr. Shay moved to northwestern France not far from Omaha Beach in 2018 and lived there until his death. Wise move.
If you want to read the full obit of Mr. Shay, you can find it in today’s New York Times.