Final Letters of Kamikaze Pilots - Japan Powered
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Final Letters of Kamikaze A AA
Pilots
MY BOOKS
Posted on MAY 22, 2016
Once again, orders have come down for the attack from Subscribe
which we will never return. I feel not the slightest regret.
Already I have grown intimate with death, the ultimate
character-building passage that we human beings have to
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face. All that is left is to carry out the duties for which I’ve
been trained and to fulfill the Imperial mandate. I am
deeply ashamed that in the twenty-seven years of my life I
have been such an unworthy son and younger brother.
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The made-in-Manila bar of toilet soap you’ll find in my Anime’s Breast Obsession
Explained
things was given to me by the chief of staff. Please take
good care of Mother, and take care of yourself in the coming
winter.
Yoshitaro
The Controversy Surrounding
Goblin Slayer Episode 1
Captain Furukawa Takao to his wife
But orders, for better or for worse, changed again, and I was
assigned to another squadron and given other duties. We
made two sorties to Okinawa; the first was completed
without incident, and I returned without doing anything
The Two Frogs: A Japanese
especially heroic. Folktale
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couldn’t.
In order to destroy our enemy, I will summon courage with A Look at Gender Expectations
all my might and will go to strike. We are the ones to deliver in Japanese Society
the country from the current crisis. Taking pride in this, I will
surely do it. My comrades have already done it. Even right
now my comrades, believing in those who will follow after C AT E G O R I E S
them, are striking the enemy.
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school kids and everyone else singing war songs and waving
a sea of flags as they saw us off to the front is burned
indelibly into my mind. I firmly believe in the benevolence of
the Emperor and of our parents. Mother seems to be
growing weaker by the day. Brother and Sister, you will have
to give her the love that I cannot.
Goodbye
References
Posted in HISTORY
My father was born in 1937 in northern Japan, near the start of the
Second Sino-Japanese War. By the age of twelve he’d become a
committed pacifist, much motivated by having witnessed the result of
the firebombing of Aomori. Consequently, I grew up with an insight into
the Japanese anti-war, feminist, communist, anarchist, and Quaker-
pacifist movements that existed in various degrees of conflict with
official government policies, especially those of Imperial Japanese
military-colonialism dating back to the time of the Russo-Japanese War.
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I not to long ago wrote something about the feminist/anarchist, Kaneko
Fumiko, who was swept up in the purge after the Great Kanto
Earthquake and who subsequently died in a Japanese prison in 1926.
Reply
Chris Kincaid
May 25, 2022 at 10:16 pm
I will have to give those books a read. Thank you! The Japanese
anti-war movement isn’t discussed too often in books I’ve read.
Usually, the pacifist sections are short before going back into
description of suicide charges. As I’ve delved into bushido, I was
pleased to find most samurai writers frowned upon needless
suicide. Some even discussed how such a death was a dishonor
because it violated filial piety and stole a lifetime of service from
the warrior’s lord. Sadly, these aspects of what we would call
bushido, as you know, were ignored. Did you father or any of the
other pacifist dissenters use these writings to support some of
the stances? Takuan Soho is one writer that jumps into my mind.
Reply
Kumi
May 26, 2022 at 12:35 am
Chris Kincaid
May 27, 2022 at 8:53 am
First, thank you for sharing this and the poem! You’re
right on how this isn’t widely available in English. What
I’ve read only touched on what you described. Details are
rarely offered by English books. Of course, if you read any
book about World War 1 or 2, you don’t see much about
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the American protests that went on nor the atrocities
Americans soldiers did. Omission simplifies history.
Kumi
May 26, 2022 at 12:47 am
by Akiko Yosano
Michael
June 7, 2020 at 11:08 pm
These letters are among the most powerful writings I have ever read. I
admire their devotion to their families and their nation. Unlike some
Westerners who, against their better judgement, freely spread dissent
and show disdain for their own societies and predecessors, I do not fault
American commanders for deciding to do what was done to end
Japanese imperialism. The loss of life and property was horrific but
ultimately it did enable the transformation of Japan into the peaceful
and highly functional society it is today. Were it not for those bold
decisions, more lives would almost certainly have been lost on both
sides to bring about imperial Japan’s surrender. Japan is now the envy of
the world; who knows what it would be like had America not intervened.
That our two nations are close allies and strongly tied by trade and
friendship bodes well for the decisions that were made.
Reply
Chris Kincaid
June 8, 2020 at 7:04 pm
Reply
Ric
September 26, 2021 at 12:41 am
“These letters are among the most powerful writings I have ever
read. I admire their devotion to their families and their nation.
Unlike some Westerners who, against their better judgement,
freely spread dissent and show disdain for their own societies
and predecessors.”
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their society if they go through with metaphorically jumping into
a bonfire they built themselves.
“Against their better judgement…” I’m not too sure about your
judgement frankly, you picked a nation that essentially thought
that taking on a first tier threat, when they’re stalemated and
struggling with a mid-tier threat was a good idea, resulting in
them unconditionally surrounding, their cities burnt, tens of
millions of lives lost, countless maimed and permanently injured,
and getting to be the only recipients of hostile nuclear devices.
This is the result of doing exactly what you are praising got them,
neverminded that they kill a lot of innocent people as well.
Maybe the Japanese people who dissented and were disdainful
of the culture the military adopted of “just trust the army people”
were right. I struggle to find a worse example for the things you
are supporting than this.
Reply
Chris Kincaid
September 26, 2021 at 9:09 am
John Cowling
March 9, 2022 at 10:03 am
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Nagasaki’s date three days closer to not give Japan time to
surrender. Ironically, once the American occupation of Japan
began after VJ day the US pardoned many heinous Japanese war
criminals, casting doubt onto the bombings being a question of
justice. The notion that the bombings ‘transformed ‘ Japan into
what it is today is a strange one to me, I find it hard to believe
any goodwill between the west and Japan was formed by the
mass murder of it’s civilian inhabititants. Speaking subjectively, I
don’t find the Western-Japanese relationship all that healthy in
truth, from us distilling an ancient island culture into crass vapid
exotic consumer media and cheap cars, and they having memory
holed their own dark 20th century and suffering (far from
functional) from the social decay from their embrace of
neoliberal capitalism, which has seen the erosion of labor
movements, the rise in Japanese exceptionalism and the
phenomenon of such a highly stressed and profit driven middle
class that it threatens the traditional family structures of Japanese
culture. So to finish, I must say I think the bombings of Japan
rank among the worst war crimes of the 20th century, and I, as
an American, Westerner and humanist, am more than happy ,
proud even, with my best judgement, to freely spread dissent
and show disdain against the crimes and cruelties enacted upon
the citizens of Japan in the 1944-45. I most certainly fault any
commander or society, my own included, that commits such acts,
and I would hope that my Japanese equivalent would show the
same contempt towards his predecessors in Manchuria and the
Philippines. I truly believe that a citizen’s most sacred duty is to
hold his or her own government to account, not from afar as a
foreigner but from within as a sovereign son.
Reply
Chris Kincaid
March 10, 2022 at 7:40 am
When you dive deep into history, you start to see just
how complicated events and perspectives can become.
And you see how uncertainty will always remain. Did the
a-bombs convince the hold-out factions of Japan to stop
fighting? Perhaps. Did the US need to drop them?
Perhaps not for Japan’s surrender, but perhaps yes to
stave off a bloodier conflict with the Soviet Union. Then
again, perhaps not. Either way, the actions were done, and
we need to consider the lessons and consequences of
those actions so we can do better. It just shows that war is
one of the most primitive of human behaviors, and one
we really should leave behind.
Mon
May 4, 2020 at 1:17 am
There were Japanese flags in the museum with Japanese characters all
over and the museum curator said Japanese visitors to the museum
translated them as letters of families of the young soldiers. It is sad,
especially thinking that many of these soldier were just starting with
their lives – late teens and early 20s
Reply
Chris Kincaid
May 4, 2020 at 10:40 am
I’m glad the museum exists. World War II is quickly fading into
history as the people who live through it die, and with them will
also die the lessons the war taught.
Reply
Fred
September 20, 2018 at 8:37 am
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Actually they were more human, they were giving their lives to try to
stop Americans who were mass bombing Japanese cities and mass
murdering Japanese civilians. This is why they were willing to do
kamikaze and die.
Did the Japanese mass bomb and murder American civilians? No, they
just attacked a US army base that was on occupied land the US took
over from the Kingdom of Hawaii.
Reply
Chris Kincaid
September 21, 2018 at 8:43 am
Reply
Moon
October 23, 2018 at 10:48 am
Reply
Chris Kincaid
October 26, 2018 at 10:25 pm
Mon
May 4, 2020 at 1:20 am
Reply
Anon
December 11, 2020 at 7:43 am
You are an idiot. Both sides were full of monsters, and trying to
justify one being better than the other is outrageous.
Reply
Takashi Furukawa
August 17, 2018 at 11:22 pm
Furukawa, above mentioned, died shot by B29. Six years later,vhis plane
was found offshore of small island. I went to the island with my mother.
Reply
Chris Kincaid
August 18, 2018 at 8:45 am
Thank you for providing more details. I had hoped the letters
would provide the human story behind what books often show
as dry history.
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Reply
Salatiso
February 29, 2020 at 8:26 am
Reply
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