Malnourished and weak, Shoichi Yokoi after his discovery on Guam in 1972. |
On
January 24, 1972 Shoichi Yokoi, a sergeant
of the Imperial Japanese Army, was discovered on Guam. He had spent 28 years hiding in the jungle despite learning twenty years before in 1952
that World War II was over and Japan
was defeated. On the other hand he missed being toasted by a flame thrower or being a POW and collected his back pay.
Amazingly,
he was not the last Japanese hold out. Second
Lieutenant Hiroo Onoda had to be relieved
from duty by his former commanding
officer on March 9, 1974 in the Philippines
and Private Teruo Nakamura, a
member of an indigenous Taiwanese tribe and
a colonial draftee, was captured by
the Indonesian Army on December
18,1974 on Morotai Island.
But
Yokoi’s story was widely celebrated in
Japan where he became a celebrity
advocate of simple, austere living and
authored a bestselling autobiography. He was also the subject of a 1977 documentary film, Yokoi and His Twenty-Eight Years of Secret Life on Guam.
Surviving members of an Army 77th Infantry Division unit on Guam with a trophy flag. Despite taking heavy losses the Marines got all most all of the press coverage during the bloody campaign. |
His
story resonates personally with me because my father, Lt. W.M. Murfin served as a Medical Corps officer in a forward
Battalion Aid Station with the Army’s
77th Division in the tough battle
to recapture the former American colony. The Army shared the invasion with the Marine
Corps 3rd Division and other units.
While the Marines were able to quickly secure their beach head and move inland, Army troops had no amphibious vehicles and were dumped
by landing ships on the barrier reef and had to wade ashore hundreds of yards under withering fire. They were pinned down on their beach
heads for days taking heavy casualties and cut off from most re-supply by the
lack of the amphibious vehicles.
The
battle lasted from July 21, 1944 to August 10 when the island was declared secure after the collapse of the Japanese defensive line
in the rugged northern end of the island.
But as many as 7,500 Japanese troops remained at large and in
hiding. They continued to harass
American troops even as work began to make the island a major air base for strategic bombing. Over the
next months most stragglers were captured or killed. Some committed
suicide. The last organized attack
by the holdouts killed three Marines on December 8, 1945. Even then small groups remained at large
hiding from troops in caves in the
hills.
Yokoi
initially was part of a group of 10 men who hid out and survived by hunting, fishing, and occasionally raiding
food from local Guamanians. But that was risky. Mainly they avoided all contact. After a few years seven of the men moved to
another part of the island. Yokoi’s last companions died in a flood about
1964. He lived in virtual total isolation for the next eight years. He mostly hunted by night retreating to his carefully camouflaged cave during the day. He used native plants to make
clothes, bedding, and storage implements.
Jesus Dueñas and Manuel De Gracia, were checking their shrimp traps along a small river in
dense jungle near the village of Talofofo
when they stumbled on Yokoi. At first
they assumed he was another villager, but he thought they hunting him for
raiding their traps so he attacked the men.
After a scuffle the two
managed to overcome him. They bound him
and carried him out of the jungle, battered but not seriously injured, and
turned him over to local authorities.
Sgt. Shoichi Yokoi. |
Yokoi
was a 26 year old apprentice tailor when he was conscripted in 1941. He
first served with the 29th Infantry
Division in the puppet state Manchukuo—Manchuria. In 1943, he was transferred to the 38th Regiment in the Mariana
Islands and arrived on Guam in February 1943. The Japanese assumed that the Americans would
make their former possession a prime target of their island hopping campaign. Already
a veteran soldier Yokoi had risen to the rank of sergeant and was imbued with a fierce loyalty to the Emperor
and the Imperial Army’s strict code
of honor which included never
surrendering or being captured
alive.
He
was rapidly repatriated to Japan
where he was stunned and embarrassed to find himself a national celebrity. He felt ashamed. “It is with much embarrassment, but I have
returned,” he told reporters. The quote was quickly incorporated into a popular
song.
Weakened and emotional Yokoi needed help standing to greet the dignitaries who turned out to greet him when he landed in Tokyo. |
Despite
difficulties he did adjust. He returned
home to rural Aichi Prefecture
where he married and raised a family. He was frequently sought out for interviews and after his ghost written autobiography and again when the documentary film
came out, he made rounds of TV appearances. He had become a national hero.
Although
never granted an audience with his beloved Emperor Hirohito, on a tour of the Imperial Palace grounds he said, “Your Majesties, I have returned home
... I deeply regret that I could not serve you well. The world has certainly
changed, but my determination to serve you will never change.”
Such
repeated sentiments made him a valuable
symbol for ultra-rightist Japanese nationalists
who wanted to re-arm and assert a dominant role Asia outside of American
influence. This alarmed both the government and U.S. security and intelligence agencies.
Despite
this Yokoi was allowed to live out his life unmolested. He spent his retirement
as a potter. He died in 1997 of a heart attack at age 82 and was buried at a Nagoya
cemetery, under a gravestone that
had originally been commissioned by his
mother in 1955, after he had been declared
officially dead.
The Shoichi Yokoi Memorial Museum opened in Nakagawa-ku, Nagoya in 2007 where visitors can see a reproduction of his long-time
cave home and the everyday objects and
tools he created. Also on display are examples of his work as a
potter.
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