Shuichi Yokoi: A Japanese soldier who hid in the jungles of Guam for 28 years after World War II
Exactly 50 years ago today, a Japanese soldier was found safe and sound in the jungles of Guam almost three decades after the end of World War II.
The
soldier, who lived in hiding in the jungle for 28 years after the war ended in
fear of the enemy, was hailed as a hero and welcomed back to Japan, but he
never lived a normal life in this modern society.
During
those 28 years, Lance Corporal Shuichi Yokoi of the Japanese army, hiding in
the jungles of Guam, was convinced that his comrades would one day come looking
for him.
When
local hunters found him on a Pacific island on January 24, 1972, the 57-year-old
veteran had in mind that his life was in danger. Yokoi's nephew, Omi Hatashan,
says he was "terrified" to see the hunters.
After
a gap of 30 years, he was shocked to see glimpses of other human beings like
himself because he had not seen any human being for many years. That is why
they tried to grab the hunter's rifle but after years of eating unhealthy food
they became weak and could not compete with the locals.
Hatashan
says he feared the hunters would arrest him as a prisoner of war because if
that happened it would be a disgrace to him as a Japanese soldier and to his
family in Japan.
As
the hunters led Yokoi through the thick grass of the forest, Yokoi begged them
to kill him but not to take him prisoner.
Hatashan
has tried to tell the dramatic story of his recovery in Japan two years after
he met his uncle Yokoi. It also contains the eyewitness accounts of people
(hunters) who found them.
His
book, Private Yukois War and Life in Guam 1944-1972, was published in 2009 with
English translation. "I'm very proud of them," he said. He was a shy
and quiet man and had a wonderful personality.
Underground
shelter
Yokoi's
arduous journey began in July 1944 when US forces invaded Guam in the Pacific
as part of their offensive against Japan.
There
were casualties on both sides in this bloody battle. But when the Japanese
command disbanded, Yokoi and the other soldiers of his platoon were trying to
avoid the enemy's relentless onslaught on the principle of self-help.
"First
of all, they were very careful about the fear of being caught," says
Hatashan. They used to erase their footprints while moving in the forest so
that no one could reach them while chasing them.
In
the early days, the Japanese soldiers, who were only a few dozen left behind,
managed to catch and kill the local cattle and provide food.
At first they were afraid of being captured by US troops and later they fled for fear of local poachers. Meanwhile, they were getting deeper into the forest.
There they ate poisonous frogs, sea urchins and rats. Yokoi also built a bait fishing net with the help of wild bushes. He dug an underground shelter for himself with the help of bamboo sticks.
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