|
Lasting three years
and eight months, the Pacific War ended on August 15, 1945 with Japan'
s unconditional surrender and acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration. People
throughout Japan and soldiers stationed outside the country alike all
heard the Emperor's radio broadcast declaring surrender.
About fifty years ago, from 1961 through 1965, I ministered a Buddhist
temple in Ontario, Oregon, a town near the Idaho border. There was another
Buddhist temple in Portland, on the western side of the state that counted
Hiroshi Sunamoto as one of its active members. With a gentle manner, smiling
face and above average height and physique, Hiroshi left a strong impression
on me. The main character of this story, Satoru Tony Sunamoto, is his
younger brother.
Tony Sunamoto was born in July 1915 in Port Blakely, Bainbridge Island,
Washington. His father, Yozo Sunamoto, emigrated to Hawaii in June of
1904 from Koi, Hiroshima-ken and then came to Seattle six months later.
Soon after, he moved to the outskirts of Portland, Ore., and worked on
the farms for about six years. In 1910, he returned to Washington and
started to cultivate strawberries on Bainbridge Island. His bride, Sen,
arrived from Japan in 1911, and together they grew strawberries there
for the next ten years. Blessed with the birth of three sons, in 1918
they decided to send their children to Japan to study and be taken care
of by their grandparents in Hiroshima. Soon after, Yozo and Sen moved
to Hillsboro, Oregon, and continued strawberry cultivation there.
Tony, who arrived in Japan with his old brothers Muneo and Hiroshi when
he was three years old, enrolled in the local school near his grandparents'
house in Koi, Hiroshima-ken. After spending 13 years in Japan he quit
middle school and returned to the United States with his brother Hiroshi.
Tony was a typical Kibei Nisei who had just returned from Japan. He helped
his father on the strawberry farm, but since he could not speak English
he attended a local elementary school with students much younger than
him in order to learn. He progressed quickly, becoming bilingual in only
a few years and graduating from Banks High School in 1928. After graduation
he continued to help out on his father's strawberry farm along with his
brother. They were busy in all phases of production: cultivating, shipping,
marketing and maintenance and repair of farm equipment.
In December 1941, war broke out between the United States and Japan. Amidst
severe racial discrimination and war hysteria, all persons of Japanese
ancestry were driven out from the four western states' specified military
zones. In May of the following year the Sunamoto family was forced to
abandon ripe strawberry fields ready for harvest in order to evacuate
to the Portland Assembly Center where there was a county fair ground.
After two months they were sent to the Minidoka Relocation Center near
Hunt, Idaho.
Hiroshi, the eldest son in the family, did not come to Minidoka because
he and his wife decided to grow sugar beets and potatoes in the outskirt
of the eastern Oregon town of Ontario, which was outside of the military
zone. Unable to decide on the free evacuation, the rest of the six Sunamoto
family members settled in a roughly constructed barrack with tarred paper
walls. More than 13,000 Nikkeis from the Portland and Seattle areas were
housed at Minidoka, making it suddenly jump to being the eighth largest
city in Idaho. Once their safety and livelihood were assured, the Sunamoto
family gradually began adjusting to their new environment. However, to
Tony the days felt tedious and long.
In January of 1943, the U.S. government decided to form a Nisei army unit
and started to gather young volunteers in Hawaii and mainland relocation
centers. At the relocation centers, they started conscripting from among
those who answered "yes" to the question "If you were ordered
to fight, would you do so no matter what the circumstances?" and
sent them to Camp Shelby in Mississippi for training. The Nisei soldiers
who had been in the army prior to the start of the war were either asked
to leave the army or to move inland outside of the restricted areas. Along
with the new recruits, the soldiers forced to move inland were also sent
to Mississippi.
Tony enlisted in the U.S. Army right after the loyalty questioning. For
whatever reason, there were more volunteers from Minidoka Relocation Center
than any of the other nine relocation centers. Soon after he arrived at
Camp Shelby, he joined the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, Company H as
Pfc. (Private First Class) Sunamoto. After three to four months of training,
most Nisei soldiers were sent to the Italian and French fronts to fight
against Nazi Germany, becoming the now famous 442nd RCT.
Around the same time, a plan was being hatched to train Nisei soldiers
for military intelligence in the Pacific Theater. Those who were fluent
in Japanese were sent to Camp Savage in Minnesota to be trained as Military
Intelligence Service (MIS), including Tony, who was transferred to Minnesota
in July 1943. How torn Tony must have felt when he discovered that instead
of going to Europe, he was to fight against Japan, the land of his ancestry
and the country where he spent thirteen years of his boyhood.
He enrolled in Military Intelligence Service Language School (MISLS) in
July, 1943 and began 30 weeks of intensive classes. Since he had no problem
reading, writing and speaking Japanese, his progress was smooth, and in
the spring of 1944 he graduated from MISLS. At that time the U.S.'s counterattack
was taking shape, so Tony was sent to the Pacific front and was assigned
to the Marine Corps as Technical Sergeant Sunamoto. I wonder how he felt
on the front as Nikkei MIS soldiers were equipped only with grenades and
knives in some army units? They had bodyguards to protect them from friendly
fire (misidentification) as well as enemy fire. The reason why they were
not allowed to carry rifles nor machine guns may have been a result of
the absence of trust for the Nikkei on the part of US command. As a MIS
soldier, his main duties were deciphering code, translating leaflets of
psychological tactics and captured documents, and interpreting prisoner
questionings, although he also participated in operations on the front
line.
On the European Front of France and Italy, the 442nd Regimental Combat
Team with its motto "Go for Broke" was well known by the American
public, and its outstanding achievements were broadcast through newspapers,
magazines, books and movies. On the other hand, the existence of the MIS
soldiers in the Pacific, known as "Yankee Samurai", designated
by President Harry Truman as "a secret weapon in this war",
was kept in strict secrecy until the war's end. However, their accomplishments
were highly praised by General MacArthur's headquarters that the Nisei's
contribution helped shorten the war in the Pacific by two years.
In August 1945, a garrison of 2,500 Japanese soldiers was stationed on
the small island of Mili (part of the Marshall Islands in the Central
Pacific) under the command of naval officer, Captain Masanari Shiga. Even
though the island was small (0.9 by 1.3 miles), it had an airfield for
Mitsubishi Zero fighters and bombers. Because it was one of the more strategically
important Marshall Islands, it was used as a base by the Japanese army.
At the outset of the war, 5,700 soldiers were stationed there, but that
number decreased to less than half because of disease, hunger, and repeated
bombing by the U.S. military.
After conquering Majuro Island in February 1944 and securing the airport
and anchorage area there, the United States changed to island hopping
tactics and decided to leave Mili without further attack. They proceeded
to target Saipan Island and Iwo-jima Island instead, which were closer
to mainland Japan. When the war ended in August 1945, notice of surrender
and disarmament was to be delivered to the unconquered islands where Japanese
soldiers were still barricaded.
However, the navy was faced with the problem of selecting whom to send
to Mili. Even though the war had ended, going to an island that had until
yesterday been enemy territory would not be an easy task. Fully aware
that it might lead to his death, Tony volunteered for this task and landed
alone on this island that Japanese soldiers were determined to defend,
bearing with him the mission of persuading the Japanese to surrender and
disarm peacefully. The Japanese soldiers probably could not believe their
eyes seeing a lone American soldier with a Japanese face.
As Mili Island was made of a coral reef formation, it was not suitable
for crops other than a single product, coco nuts. In addition, because
external supply lines (including to the mainland) had been cut off since
the end of 1943, there was a severe lack of provisions leading to malnutrition
and starvation. Upon this island on which even the snakes and frogs had
long since disappeared, the soldiers were surviving on meager provisions
and sheer force of will. Be that as it may, because of Japanese military's
battlefield code, teaching soldiers that it is "better to die than
to be captured", persuading them to accept peaceful surrender and
disarmament would be no easy task. As conditions worsened for the Japanese
army near the end of the Pacific War, it was not uncommon for soldiers
who had exhausted every possible means fighting, to decide to die together
in one final assault. Tony wanted to avoid this.
With tears in his eyes, Tony appealed to Captain Shiga with his own interpretation,
"The war is over. There is no prisoner. There is no surrenderer."
It was an encounter between persons of the same Japanese blood. However,
it was more like a man-to-man, or samurai-to-samurai. Tony's appeal of
not wasting lives and of being able to send 2500 men back to their homes
as quickly as possible moved the captain. When he heard, "Yes"
in response, it changed Tony's tears to those of joy. The worst-case scenario
of another round of hostilities was safely evaded, and the Japanese flag
was replaced with that of the Red Cross, as both sides celebrated avoiding
additional sacrifices. Being forced by a fateful war to fight against
the country of his 13-year-childhood filled Tony with sorrow, but the
fact that he was able to save the lives of those sharing the same blood
gave him great happiness. He felt thankful that he had been elected as
diplomatic envoy, since he was able to fulfill the desire of the American
army to avoid unnecessary casualties for themselves, their allies, and
the Japanese. A few days after the Shiga-Sunamoto meeting, the American
representative and Japanese army held a ceremony on Aug. 22 in which the
surrender papers were officially signed, marking the first time the Japanese
army signed a surrender treaty after war.
The Japanese army at Mili demobilized and the soldiers were repatriated,
but Shiga was sent to Majuro and charged with the crime of killing five
American crew members who were captured in the ocean after trying to escape
from their fallen plane. He was a graduate of Naval Academy in Etajima
in Hiroshima, not far from where Tony grew up. Covering for his men, Shiga
said, "I gave them an order. All responsibility lies in me, none
in them." He then killed himself by the way of seppuku, the traditional
ritual suicide of a samurai. Tony was heartbroken as he translated the
captain's words in the trial. At their last farewell, Shiga gave his most
treasured sword to Tony, telling him to keep it. Thanks to his actions,
the eleven subordinates who had undergone questioning along with him were
able to return to Japan without further problems.
After being discharged from the army in January 1946, Tony married a Nisei
woman Sueno (English name Jessie) and moved to Hawaii. He treasured the
sword that Shiga had given him and kept it at the kamidana (sacred place
at his home). Tony felt a deep connection to Shiga, who had not only listened
to his request for disarmament but covered for his subordinates' actions.
Unfortunately, after the war ended Tony was struck with illness, and he
passed away in June 1948, one month before his 33rd birthday, leaving
his wife and nine-month-old daughter Shirley behind.
Before he died, Tony told his father that he wanted Shiga's sword returned
to his family. As swords are said to house a warrior's soul, Tony's father,
Yozo, agreed with this request and after a long time spent searching for
Shiga's family, he arrived in Japan to return the sword to them. At the
time, Shiga's wife, Nobu, was working as a counselor at Wakayama Youth
Authority and was a mother of five children. Yozo met Nobu and her middle-school-student
son, Masanobu, at JTB (Japan Travel Bureau) Osaka head office and passed
the sword on to Nobu, who gripped onto this memento of her husband tightly
as it was returned to her.
This past October my aunt in Hillsboro, Oregon, passed away, and I attended
the funeral at the Portland Buddhist Temple. After the funeral I unexpectedly
ran into the second son of Hiroshi, Tony's older brother. It was our first
meeting, but when I asked him to tell me about his uncle, the first words
out of his mouth were, "He is a hero." Hearing the same thing
from him as from his father 50 years ago, my heart was filled yet again
with the thought that Tony was indeed an amazing person. "My aunt
died but Tony's daughter is in Denver.", Hiroshi's son said and gave
me her name and telephone number. Someday, I hope that I am able to meet
her.
This is a past and present story of an incident that happened 65 years
ago in the summer of 1945 on a little island in the Pacific.
The end
|
|