Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Smoke signals. (Grand Ronde, Or.) 19??-current | View Entire Issue (March 1, 2002)
MARCH 1, 2002 Smoke Signals 3 He's A Vetenan, A Loggen And An Antist Neven Realized Tribal Elder Russ Leno grew up in Grand Ronde, takes care of the cemetery. By Chris Mercier Silent types always tend to be enigmatic, quite often because they've much to say, but need all the prodding in the world to tell. Grand Ronde Tribal Elder Russ Leno is a perfect example. You've seen him. He's the quiet man who works in the Tribal cemetery, the one who feels at ease with the solitude and serenity of the fi nal resting grounds. Sitting there in his office, I can relate. A silent satisfaction permeates this piece of earth, a sense of sanctuary and finality. We chat, mere feet away from buried souls, some at peace and some not, many of them having submitted their stories to other ears, others lit erally having taken theirs to the grave. There, Russ tells me his. Some questions elicit a simple 'yes' or 'no.' Other questions send him into ruminations I can barely keep up with, frantically scribbling away. Russ was born June 11, 1927 in this area. Whether Grand Ronde or Dallas is his birth place, he never really knew. In his childhood, as now, it didn't truly matter. Either way, Russ grew up in Grand Ronde, at a time when the Reservation extended up to Highway 18 and paved roads hadn't quite made their way over. He had eight siblings seven brothers and one sister. His father Dave was a carpenter and log ger, his mother Emma Tom a housewife skilled in farming and canning. He still lives in the ancestral Leno home; the rustic blue house built in 1940 located on the curve along Grand Ronde Road just after the elementary school. The same curve, in fact, where Russ once almost met an untimely demise. While walking home one night as a kid, he was run over. A car barreled around the curve, losing control and hit Russ straight on. He clung to the radiator in front, while the car bulled through a fence. Both his wrists were sprained, but he laughs about the whole thing. Those were the days. The decade of his childhood, the 1930's, was indeed not fruitful for any great segment of the country's population and the Leno's were no dif ferent. Few around here escaped the tendrils of the Great Depression. "Times weren't so bad back then," he told me reflecting on his experience. "But compared to now, they were." The prosperity that came with World War II also meant enlistment for many young men and once again the Leno's were no different. Russ enlisted in the United States Air Force during L a S i 1 f .' fa Kicked Back Tribal Elder Russ Leno spends his days taking care of the Tribal Cemetery and telling tales of his younger days. 1945, following four of his brothers, and after Germany had succumbed to the allied resur gence and while Japan still hung on by a thread for the sake of pride. He was promptly stationed on Honshu, in To kyo, working as a personnel clerk. In three years he achieved the rank of Private First Class, though his military career seems to have affected him less than what he saw and experienced in war-ravaged Japan. Of those he speaks freely. "I got to see Hiroshima and Nagasaki after they were bombed," he recollected. "Everything was melted down to the ground. Not broken. "I took some photos, but they got confiscated," he added. "I guess they didn't want people to see what had happened." Lots happened and not just in Hiroshima or Nagasaki. For starters, Russ' military records got lost, meaning that he went 11 months with out getting paid for his services, forcing him to borrow money and sell rations to destitute Japa nese families in exchange for yen. But the up shot to the bureaucratic miscue was that with out records he was able to drift between bases, hoping they were undermanned and needing a few more hands to work with. "When we'd get tired of work we'd pack up and move to another base," he said. Mechanic, clerk, engineer Russ worked all manners of jobs before finding stability handling records. "In the office you'd get a lot of guys," he said. "They'd been fighting, so they weren't very happy people." The environment probably didn't help either. Away from the ruin, Russ told me, the Japanese countryside could be quite striking, opening into rice fields and tiny wooden huts. But near the war zone it "looked like the end of the world." And felt like it too, he explained to me. The first "office" he worked in was a bombed out fac tory. The windows had long been broken and blown away and workers toiled away some days in two or three pairs of clothing, the Japanese winters maintaining a fierce reputation. Russ made friends along the way though, get ting to know many Japanese even if U.S. mili tary regulations forbid interaction between sol diers and residents. Surprisingly, being Indian was not the source of any discrimination in those pre-civil rights days. "Oh yeah, the blacks sure had problems, though," he said. "But the Indians, no. You know, sometimes I think the other soldiers, they were scared of Indians. Must have been they still thought we were savages or something." Nothing pre vented Russ from having the time of his life. His stories are numerous, par ticularly one he told me about a GI beach party. He and one of his buddies met two ladies, and thought what a great idea it would be to take some beers and hit up one of the rafts. Well, they knew nothing of Japan's notorious riptide and being a little inebriated to 4 . ... v .v- I t .4 ' RUSS AS A Young Man - Leno grew up in Grand Ronde and had 7 brothers and 1 sister. He still lives in his families' ancestral home on Grand Ronde Road. Leno enlisted in the United States Air Force in 1945. begin with, noticed little as the raft and occupants quickly floated out to the high sea. While the other couple opted to wait out a rescue, Russ and his date elected to swim back. Or at least try and swim back, not taking into account how draining and tiring the ocean could be. The pair was liter ally washed up on shore, exhausted to the point of near-unconsciousness. "I've never swam in the ocean since then," he admitted. His desire to ride in an airplane was also ful filled, though not the way he dreamed of. "I rode in a C-47 once," he said, referring to the enormous transport planes of old. "The wings bat ted up and down, and you couldn't hear a thing." Which made him nervous of course. "Yeah, you bet." When Russ returned to America in 1947, he began what would be a long career in the tim ber industry, one that kept him in the region for the rest of his life. He would live 20 years in Tillamook, and even pass a year logging in Forks, Washington. A chance at another career arose once, one that he still thinks of. Russ was a talented artist and a newspaper in Sweet Home offered him work as their cartoonist. But not thinking his skills were especially unique, he declined. He hasn't drawn in years. Russ did start a family, though, marrying one Helen Hegney and fathering five children in his life Randy, Jackie, Ron, Rhonda, and Rusty. It was through Randy, in fact, that Russ had one of the most memorable adventures of his life time. While serving in the Navy, Randy invited his parents to make a three-day visitors' trip from Seattle to Alameda, California aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise, one of the largest and prized ships in the U.S. Naval Fleet. Russ retired from logging in 1980 and has held a number of jobs since then. He has been at the cemetery for nearly thirteen years now, prefer ring to work instead of languishing at home, even at the age of 75. "I gotta be doing something," he said. "When it's time to retire, I'll know." Will he ever make it back to Japan? "Probably not," he said. "But God, I'd do any thing to see it now." H