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The Japanese war pilot who came to Pearl Harbor to apologize

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John Burger - published on 12/07/21
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Takeshi Maeda helped sink the USS West Virginia. Years later, he shook hands with a sailor who survived the attack.

As the 50th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor approached in 1991, an official from the Japanese foreign ministry forestalled any possibility that Japan's Parliament would do anything to memorialize the event. The end of the Second World War had brought deep humiliation to the Japanese Empire, and a commemoration would just bring out so much pain. 

The foreign ministry official shut down all debate by simply stating that all those who had been involved in the attack on Hawaii were now dead, thus implying that the subject was not worthy of discussion. 

As far as many Japanese citizens were concerned, those who took part in the attack -- and indeed, anyone who served in the military at that time -- might as well have been dead. They either ignored or shunned the veterans, according to Marcus Perkins, a photographer who has written about Pearl Harbor.

But some of these veterans were very much alive -- not only not cowering in humiliation, but finding ways to turn that humiliation, shame and regret into something life-giving. One such was Takeshi Maeda.

Born in 1921, Maeda joined the Imperial Japanese Navy in 1938. Three years later, after training for an attack on a place he knew nothing about, his plane took off from an aircraft carrier in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, carrying a single torpedo. His was one of 350 aircraft that would swarm over Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. In their wake, they would leave over 2,330 Americans dead and numerous ships sunk or badly damaged. 

The torpedo Maeda dropped, along with torpedoes from nine other planes, sank the battleship West Virginia.

Maeda served for the duration of the war, and the long tenure gave him a chance to change his views about the conflict. As Perkins writes, “In August 1945, he was forced to join the ranks of the Kamikaze pilots’ Special Attack Force. ‘I had accumulated 3,800 hours of combat flying experience. I couldn’t believe my commanders wanted to waste all that in a single mission,’" Maeda said. Perkins explains:

Working for reconciliation

After the war, Maeda ended up laboring quietly for a large Japanese corporation. Eventually, he began working to develop the relationship between Japanese and American veterans of Pearl Harbor, and became a member of the Japan-US Cultural Exchange Committee, writes Jennifer Popowycz the Leventhal Research Fellow at The National WWII Museum. 

The same year the foreign ministry official persuaded the Japanese Parliament to ignore the 50th anniversary of Pearl Harbor, Maeda gave a speech in English at a symposium for the US Pearl Harbor Association in Hawaii. The speech ended with the simple but strong words "Pearl Harbor -- never again." 

He had brought a group of Japanese veterans with him and attended the opening of the Pearl Harbor Aviation Museum.

Maeda continued to have encounters with American military veterans who had survived the attack -- his former enemies -- and pursued initiatives to promote peace and understanding. Two others who took part in the attack -- Zenji Abe and Kaname Harada -- did likewise. 

Efforts not in vain

In 2006, Maeda performed a “handshake reconciliation service” with a survivor of the USS West Virginia, Popowycz points out. She quotes him to describe the event:

“The man shaking Maeda’s hand was John Rauschkolb, a Navy signalman, who ... had to swim under burning fuel to escape bullets being fired at him from a Japanese Zero fighter,” Popowycz writes. “In an interview after the event, Rauschkolb stated ‘I’ve never held anything against them. They were doing their job. I was doing my job. We were military. They were taking orders. I was taking orders.’”

She continues:

When Maeda died at the age of 98 in 2019, he was the last surviving Japanese airman directly involved in the attack on Pearl Harbor. His efforts, though, have not been in vain. In 2016, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe traveled to Pearl Harbor on the 75th anniversary of the attack. Standing at the USS Arizona Memorial with then-President Barack H. Obama, Abe said, “I offer my sincere and everlasting condolences to the souls of those who lost their lives here as well as to the spirits of all the brave men and women whose lives were taken by a war that commenced in this very place and also to the souls of the countless innocent people who became victims of the war.”

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