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Japanese girl’s WWII job: Waving goodbye to kamikaze pilots

CHIRAN (Japan) — As young army pilots took off on suicide-attack missions in the closing days of World War II, the schoolgirls in this south-western Japanese town waved handkerchiefs and branches of pink blossoms.

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CHIRAN (Japan) — As young army pilots took off on suicide-attack missions in the closing days of World War II, the schoolgirls in this south-western Japanese town waved handkerchiefs and branches of pink blossoms.

“Remembering that still makes me tremble,” said Madam Chino Kuwashiro, now a tiny 86-year-old with a stooped back. “We waved and waved until we couldn’t see them anymore. Why did we have to endure such sorrow?”

She and the other girls were called “Nadeshiko”, after the fragile pink flowers seen as a symbol of femininity in Japan. They were ordered to take care of the pilots at the army base in Chiran. Their jobs included cleaning, doing the laundry, sewing on buttons, and saying goodbye.

The 100 or so girls had their jobs for barely a month in the spring of 1945, but the farewell ceremony, in which some were ordered to take part, is etched painfully in their minds. Only about a dozen Nadeshiko women are alive today.

Chiran served as the take-off spot for 439 pilots on suicide-attack missions, many of them also teenagers. Japan surrendered four months later.

Mdm Kuwashiro broke into tears as she pointed to the green-tea groves and pumpkin patch where the runway once stood. The planes tipped their wings three times in a farewell salute — a bomb hung from one wing, a fuel tank from the other.

Japanese here say Chiran today highlights the horrors and extremes of war, and want their town of 10,000 to be designated as a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) World Heritage site. They have yet to gain even the approval needed from the Japanese government, but an exhibit thousands of miles away suggests there are powerful lessons in the lives lost here 70 years ago.

Photos, letters and poems from the pilots of Chiran are now on exhibit, for the first time outside Japan, on the battleship USS Missouri, berthed in Pearl Harbour, Hawaii. The items are from the Chiran Peace Museum, which is devoted to the suicide-mission army pilots.

Though such Japanese pilots in World War II are generally known as “kamikaze”, that name applied specifically to navy pilots. Their army counterparts, like those in Chiran, were called “tokko”. Those who refused to fly to their deaths were imprisoned.

“I have a big smile, Mother, as I am about to carry out my last, and first, act of filial love. Don’t cry. Please think I did good,” wrote Fujio Wakamatsu, 19, in one of the letters on display.

Mr Michael Carr, the president and chief executive of the Battleship Missouri Memorial, said that instead of recoiling at the stories, visitors are moved by the Chiran exhibit, which runs through Nov 11.

“It shows that we are all people who share the same love for our family, love of country, and obligation to duty,” he said. “We need to continually highlight and remember history so that people can learn from it and move forward with a perspective of tolerance, dignity and peace.”

A corner of the Chiran museum is devoted to Nadeshiko, and includes a video with interviews made in the late 1980s.

Reiko Akabane, a Nadeshiko who died in 2006, said in the video that she went up to one of the pilots before his departure, to return change from the money he had given her to mail a letter to his parents. Instead of taking the coins, Shinji Sakaguchi took out his wallet and handed it to her as a keepsake.

Another pilot who was standing by, Nobuo Taniguchi, regretted that he had nothing to give her. He stooped down and picked up two small smooth rocks.

“These are the last stones that were under my feet,” Akabane recalled him as saying.

The wallet and rocks are on display at a small cottage-like building called Firefly Hall in Chiran. It’s a replica of a restaurant run by Tome Torihama, a woman many pilots came to see as their mother figure, and it was built by Torihama’s grandson in 2000.

The source of the building’s name is a 19-year-old pilot named Saburo Miyagawa. He had promised Torihama he would come back as a firefly, and right about the time his plane sank into the ocean, a particularly big glowing bug flew into the garden of Torihama’s restaurant.

The firefly is an image often used in Japan to symbolise the kamikaze and death because of its association with love, poetry and a very short life.

“They were all people who went straight to heaven,” said Torihama in the museum video. “They were all gentle. I wanted to make them all my children.”

The pilots confided their deepest fears to Torihama and some Nadeshiko. Torihama died in 1992, at 89.

According to the museum, when the girls went to pick up the pilots’ pillow cases to wash, they found they were drenched in tears.

But when they took off, to their certain death, they put on brave fronts. Mdm Kuwashiro thought they resembled living angels.

“They looked brave,” she said. “They didn’t have sad faces.” AP

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