Tokyo, Imperial Japan’s "last samurai" dies
Tokyo ( AsiaNews) - After a lifetime of war (real
and imagined) and redemption by teaching young people the value of peace, the the
last samurai of Imperial Japan has died . Hiroo
Onoda, a
second lieutenant in the Imperial Japanese Army, who hid in the jungles of the
Philippines for 29 years, refusing to believe that World War II ended, died on
Jan. 16, 10 days after he entered a Tokyo hospital with pneumonia. He was 91.
Onoda
was born in March 1922 in what is now called Kainan, Wakayama Prefecture in . In
1944 he enrolled in the Imperial Army Military School, where he was trained for
guerrilla warfare : the Second World War was about to end and the Japanese
military leaders have abandoned the idea of suicide bombers, replacing them
with infiltrated fighters. He
was sent to Lubang Island in the Philippines, with the task of waging guerilla
warfare on the Allied Forces who were based there.
In
1945, after the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the surrender of Japan,
Onoda was still hidden in the jungle of Lubang . The
leaflets dropped by the American to inform the public that the war was over are
written in Japanese, but the lieutenant did not believe them because they
contained "too many mistakes" and regarded them as a "trick by the U.S.
" to flush out the guerrillas. Thus
he decided to continue his lone battle.
In
1974, Norio Suzuki, an adventurer who traveled extensively, encountered Onoda
on the island. Suzuki explained that the war was long over, but Onoda
responded: "I will not quit fighting unless there is an order that relieves me
of my duty". Suzuki
warned the Tokyo government, who succeded in locating Onoda's wartime commander:
He travelled to the Philippines and ordered the surrender of his old
comrade. After Onoda, only Teruo
Nakamura, a native of Taiwan but enlisted by Japan, continued to fight for
another 7 months hidden in a jungle of Indonesia. Nakamura
died in 1979 in Taipei.
After
saluting the flag and bowing to his commander, Lieutenant Onoda handed over his
Samurai sword to President Ferdinand Marcos ( see photo) and surrendered. The
Manila government pardoned him, but the population of Lubang continued for
years to seek justice for the 30 people who the last samurai imperial killed
during his guerrilla warfare. In
2010 , in an interview , he said: "Every Japanese soldier was prepared for death, but as an intelligence
officer I was ordered to conduct guerrilla warfare and not to die. I became an
officer and I received an order."
In
1975 he joined his brother in Brazil and began working on his farm: here he
married Machie , who became the president of the Association of Japanese women
. In
1980, he read the story of a young man from Kanagawa Prefecture who killed his
parents because of the stress caused by the college entrance exams and decided
to return to Japan. According to his brother, he wanted "to teach young
people how to become strong enough to overcome the difficulties of life without
resorting to violence". This is why he opened
a school in Yamanashi in 1984, which later moved to Fukushima in 1991.
In
1996 he returned to Lubang to donate over 10 thousand dollars to a primary
school. Once
he was too old to work, he began to tour the country giving conferences on the
theme of "inner strength " and " redemption as a path to peace."
Last
October, after a reflection of about 20 years , he published a book entitled
" Ikiru " ( "Live " ), which became a best-seller in the
country.
12/02/2016 15:14
24/10/2019 17:56
21/04/2016 21:00