Sunday, February 13, 2011

Hawaii war hero remembered



Hawaii war hero remembered


Barney Hajiro, Medal of Honor Recipient, Dies at 94

After Barney Hajiro, an Army private, single-handedly wiped out two German machine gun nests and killed two snipers in a gallant charge in World War II, his superiors recommended him for the Medal of Honor.
As part of a regiment composed entirely of Japanese-Americans below the officers’ ranks, Private Hajiro epitomized the unit’s brash motto, “Go for Broke!” His commanding officer’s report said that in October 1944 in eastern France, he had run 100 yards through a stream of bullets, walked through a booby-trapped area and led the charge up “Suicide Hill” screaming “Banzai!” before taking out the machine gun nests.
He was shot four times — then insisted that 40 other wounded men be evacuated first.
But he, like Senator Daniel K. Inouye of Hawaii, who was also a member of the regiment, did not initially receive the Medal of Honor for which he was recommended. Only in 2000, after 56 years and a belated Pentagon review, did President Bill Clinton present the medal, the nation’s top military honor, to Mr. Hajiro, Senator Inouye and 20 other Asian-American soldiers. Racial prejudice, Mr. Clinton said, had prevented such a ceremony after the war.
“I nearly gave up hope,” Mr. Hajiro said at the time.
“Barney was a good man,” Senator Inouye said in an interview on Wednesday. “He didn’t go around blowing his own horn. He would just say he was doing something he was supposed to do.”
Mr. Hajiro, who had battled cancer, died on Jan. 21 in Honolulu at 94, his family said. He had been the nation’s oldest Medal of Honor recipient. His background was modest: born in Hawaii, he dropped out of school in the eighth grade to work for 10 hours a day, at 10 cents an hour, on a sugar plantation. He was a dockworker when he was drafted into the Army in 1942 and assigned to dig ditches. He resented not being allowed to carry arms.
“I didn’t bomb Pearl Harbor,” Mr. Hajiro said in an interview in 1999. “Why did they blame us?”
As angry about Pearl Harbor as anybody, many Japanese-Hawaiians were eager to fight. Mr. Hajiro was one of the first to volunteer, in March 1943.
The 442nd Regimental Combat Team, a newly formed unit, would go on to be called the most decorated regiment for its size and length of service: its 14,000 men earned 9,486 Purple Hearts, 8 Presidential Unit Citations and 52 Distinguished Service Crosses, the second-highest individual honor in the Army. Mr. Hajiro received three of those.
He and many of his comrades were decorated for the regiment’s most celebrated operation, known as “the rescue of the Lost Battalion,” in which they saved 211 fellow soldiers trapped in southern France while suffering more than 800 casualties.
One regiment member, Pfc. Sadao S. Munemori, actually did receive a Medal of Honor, posthumously, in 1945, after the Japanese American Citizens League persuaded a Utah senator to take up the soldier’s cause. A Filipino-American also won the medal in World War II. But they were the rare exceptions for Asian-Americans.
The battlefield exploits of Asian-Americans came under review by the Pentagon beginning in 1996, after a similar examination, prompted by the Congressional Black Caucus, had begun looking into why no blacks had been awarded the Medal of Honor in World War II. Senator Daniel K. Akaka, Democrat of Hawaii, had sought the review of Asian-Americans.
(In the review of African-Americans, seven were awarded the medal in 1997, six posthumously. The seventh, Vernon Baker, died last July.)
Some criticized the reviews of both blacks and Asian-Americans as political pandering, noting that similarly qualified whites were not part of the review. But President Clinton said that facing racial slurs and forced internment, Japanese-Americans had not gotten a fair deal.
James C. McNaughton, the Defense Department historian who led the Asian-American review, said in 2000 that the very fact that the 442nd was segregated amounted to “institutional discrimination.” But he said he could find no instance of white officers deliberately ignoring the valor of Asian-American troops.
Of the 22 Asian-Americans whose decorations were upgraded to the Medal of Honor, all but two were Japanese-Americans and members of either the 442nd or the 100th Infantry Battalion, which the 442nd absorbed in 1944. (Of the two others, one was of Filipino heritage and one of Chinese heritage.)
Senator Inouye, who lost his right arm in fierce fighting in Italy, said he and his former comrades had been modest about finally receiving the medal. “Why did we get recognized when there are hundreds of others who did the same thing?” he asked.
Barney Fushimi Hajiro, the oldest of nine children, was born on Sept. 16, 1916, in Puunene, on the island of Maui, where his parents had immigrated from Hiroshima during World War I. The family was so poor that the children were given a bottle of soda only on New Year’s Day. Barney left school as a teenager and would later say his biggest regret was not pursuing his dream of running track.
He fought in Italy, then moved with his unit to eastern France, where he was cited for bravery on Oct. 19 and Oct. 22, 1944, in battles in mountainous terrain.
On Oct. 29, in the fighting that brought him the Medal of Honor, the 442nd was pinned down, its soldiers picked off one by one by Germans on higher ground. Private Hajiro suffered wounds in his face, shoulder and wrist in leading the counterattack.
“I couldn’t run backward,” he said. “I had to run forward. That’s the job of a soldier.
Mr. Hajiro, who lived in Waipahu, on Oahu, and refused to buy a Japanese car, is survived by his wife, Esther; his son, Glenn; his brothers, Tokuro and Umeo; his sister, Pearl Yoshikawa; and a grandson. The family asked guests to wear “aloha attire” to his military burial.
The oldest living Medal of Honor recipient is now Nicholas Oresko, 94, of Cresskill, N.J.
Though Mr. Hajiro came to be revered — accepting the French Legion of Honor, serving as grand marshal at county fairs — he never forgot where he had come from. On the day the Medal of Honor was pinned to his chest, he said, “Even after the war, they still called me a Jap, you know.”



Posted on: Friday, October 15, 2004
Veteran wins Legion of Honor
By Will Hoover
Advertiser Staff Writer
Barney Hajiro has received so many decorations for heroism for his service with the legendary 442nd Regimental Combat Team in Europe during World War II, you'd think by now he'd be used to it.
Frederic Desagneaux, the French consul general in San Francisco, congratulates Barney Hajiro, 88, of the WWII 442nd combat team, after presenting him with the Legion d'Honneur, France's highest medal, on board the French navy frigate Prairial at Pier 9.
Eugene Tanner • The Honolulu Advertiser
But last night, when France's highest distinction, the Legion of Honor, was added to Hajiro's stack of honors — which include the Medal of Honor and the British Military Medal — Hajiro, 88, seemed puzzled by all the fuss.
For the French, however, the honor was long overdue.
This year the French observed the 60th anniversary of D-Day by inviting more than 90 U.S. veterans of World War II to Paris in early June to present them with the Legion of Honor. Hajiro was supposed to have been among them, but could not make the journey.
So the French came to him, pinning the medal on him at a ceremony aboard a French military surveillance ship, the Prairial, based in Papeete, Tahiti.
Looking sharp and standing at attention on the deck of the Prairial, docked at Honolulu Harbor's Pier 9, Hajiro accepted the medal last night with grace, dignity and humility in front of a crowd of more than 200 well-wishers, family and friends.
"This is the highest order of honor that the French government can award," said Patricia Lee, France's honorary consul in Hawai'i.
"We really wanted to honor Mr. Hajiro. We know we're late in doing so, because the British were first back in the 1940s."
"Barney is a very bashful guy," said Ed Ichiyama, 81, Hajiro's friend in the 442nd who fought alongside him in France. "He doesn't say much, but he always wants you to know he accepts these honors on behalf of all the men."
Last night was no exception.
"I'm very proud," Hajiro had said moments before the medal was pinned on the lapel of his black suit by Frederic Desagneaux, France's consul general in San Francisco. "I'm accepting this for all the boys."
Hajiro meant all his buddies who fought and died during the liberation of France in 1944.
It was there, near Bruyeres and Biffontaine in eastern France, that Pvt. Hajiro, in the words of his Medal of Honor citation, "distinguished himself by extraordinary heroism" — not once, but on three occasions.
On Oct. 19, he did it by placing himself in the line of fire to take out two enemy snipers. Three days later, he and a comrade ambushed a heavily armed 18-man enemy patrol, killing two, wounding one and capturing the rest.
Then, on Oct. 29, during the bloody and historic campaign to rescue "The Lost Battalion" — 275 members of the 36th "Texas" Division trapped behind fortified German lines — Hajiro charged a slope known as "Suicide Hill" straight into enemy fire.
"I lost my helmet and I lost my rifle," he said last night, recalling the action in which he was shot three times. "And then they cut me down."
But not before Hajiro had single-handedly destroyed two machine-gun nests and killed two enemy snipers.
For such courage, he has been recognized from Honolulu to Washington, D.C., to Britain.
"Now it's our turn," said Desagneaux in presenting Hajiro the Legion of Honor.
Desagneaux called the 442nd "a regiment that would change history, and a regiment that would make history," and said the time had come for his country to acknowledge Hajiro's role in the effort.
"On behalf of the people of France ... I would like to express our deepest gratitude and thanks," he said.
In closing, Hajiro's son, Glenn Hajiro, read a statement from his father thanking the French government and the people of France for the decoration, and reiterating once again that he would wear it on behalf of all members of the 442nd.
"Aloha, mahalo ... and vive la France!" he concluded.
Reach Will Hoover at whoover@honoluluadvertiser.com or 525-8038.

14 comments:

Hilary said...

Aww a good, long life to a fine hero.

黄清华 Wong Ching Wah said...

What a celebrated story of the hero !

Kay said...

Thank you for posting this Cloudia. I'm sorry he had to wait so very long to be recognized for his bravery.

Joop Zand said...

He will always be a great man / hero.... let's don't forget !!

Regards, Joop

Reanaclaire said...

hello to you Cloudia, a great salute to a Hawaiian hero, may he RIP...

have a nice weekend!

the walking man said...

They waited so lonf to award his deserved tribute from the nation because any one who wins the medal of honor their children automatically if scholastically qualified can go into any of the four service academies, their fathers medal is their congressional endorsement, and we didn't want them integrated into the officer corps until much much later.

Akelamalu said...

Lovely tribute to a true hero.

Trotter said...

Hi Cloudia! Interesting text! Always learning when coming here... 94 is also a nice figure...

Blogtrotter Two is showing an amazing village in Southern France: Saint Paul de Vence! Enjoy and have a great Sunday and week ahead!!

Pearl said...

Fantastic post, Cloudia. Barney was an American to be proud of, and that's the truth.

Pearl

irinapictures said...

Great story. Great hero.

Unknown said...

A ood man remembered.

Betty Manousos said...

What a powerful tribute to a great man!

B xx

Cloudia said...

Luv you folks!

Dina said...

Such posts of yours always make me cry.
Shaloha friend.