Now this man is a true hero. He had character, something so few have these days.
Hiroo Onoda, Japanese soldier who long refused to surrender, dies at 91
Story highlights
- Hiroo Onoda wouldn't accept Japan's World War II defeat until 1974
- He stayed in the jungle on the Philippines island where he had been deployed
- His former commanding officer had to travel to the island to persuade him to give up
- Onoda died of pneumonia in a Tokyo hospital Thursday, a collegue says
A
Japanese soldier who hunkered down in the jungles of the Philippines
for nearly three decades, refusing to believe that World War II had
ended, has died in Tokyo. Hiroo Onoda was 91 years old.
In
1944, Onoda was sent to the small island of Lubang in the western
Philippines to spy on U.S. forces in the area. Allied forces defeated
the Japanese imperial army in the Philippines in the latter stages of
the war, but Onoda, a lieutenant, evaded capture. While most of the
Japanese troops on the island withdrew or surrendered in the face of
oncoming American forces, Onoda and a few fellow holdouts hid in the
jungles, dismissing messages saying the war was over.
For 29 years, he survived on food gathered from the jungle or stolen from local farmers.
After losing his comrades to various circumstances, Onoda was eventually persuaded to come out of hiding in 1974.
His former commanding officer traveled to Lubang to see him and tell him he was released from his military duties.
In his battered old army uniform, Onoda handed over his sword, nearly 30 years after Japan surrendered..
"Every Japanese soldier was prepared for death,
but as an intelligence officer I was ordered to conduct guerrilla
warfare and not to die," Onoda told CNN affiliate, the Australian
Broadcasting Corporation. "I had to follow my orders as I was a
soldier."
He returned to Japan, where he received a hero's welcome, a figure from a different era emerging into post-war modernity.
But anger remained in the Philippines, where he was blamed for multiple killings.
The
Philippines government pardoned him. But when he returned to Lubang in
1996, relatives of people he was accused of killing gathered to demand
compensation.
After his return to Japan, he moved to Brazil in 1975 and set up a cattle ranch.
"Japan's
philosophy and ideas changed dramatically after World War II," Onoda
told ABC. "That philosophy clashed with mine so I went to live in
Brazil."
In 1984, he set up an
organization, Onoda Shizenjyuku, to train young Japanese in the survival
and camping skills he had acquired during his decades in Lubang's
jungles.
His adventures are detailed in his book "No Surrender: My Thirty-year War." The Japan Times excerpted some of the book's highlights in 2007.
Here is a sample:
--
"Men should never compete with women. If they do, the guys will always
lose. That is because women have a lot more endurance. My mother said
that, and she was so right."
--
"If you have some thorns in your back, somebody needs to pull them out
for you. We need buddies. The sense of belonging is born in the family
and later includes friends, neighbors, community and country. That is
why the idea of a nation is really important."
-- "Life is not fair and people are not equal. Some people eat better than others."
--
"Once you have burned your tongue on hot miso soup, you even blow on
the cold sushi. This is how the Japanese government now behaves toward
the U.S. and other nations."
Onoda
was born in March 1922 in Wakayama, western Japan, according to his
organization. He was raised in a family with six siblings in a village
near the ocean.
Hiroyasu
Miwa, a staff member of the organization that Onodo started in 1984,
said Onodo died of pneumonia Thursday afternoon at St. Luke's Hospital
in Tokyo. He had been sick since December.
Ever the faithful soldier, Onoda did not regret the time he had lost.
"I
became an officer and I received an order," Onodo told ABC. "If I could
not carry it out, I would feel shame. I am very competitive."h
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