By FLORO M.
MERCEN
MANILA,
Philippines — Patriotism, nationalism, love of country are abstract
values that are taught in grade school but seem to elude most of us
in the course of our lives. These values are most noticeable in our
heroes such as Jose Rizal, Andres Bonifacio, Apolinario Mabini, Claro
M. Recto, Benigno Aquino Jr., to name a few.
These ideals
are timeless. They are inculcated at an early age as a means to unify
a country and make its citizens feel as one so that in times of war,
hostilities, or when the country is threatened by outside forces, the
people would be rallied to support their motherland even at the cost
of their lives.
These
personification of selfless abnegation, as shown by our heroes, comes
to mind due to the current state of affairs, where we seem to be
threatened with outside forces as in the case of the conflict arising
out of the South China Sea, which we now call the West Philippine
Sea.
Of course, war
would be farthest in the minds of our leaders, small as we are
compared to our perceived enemies. However, it is in times like this
that the people should be conscious about their country and how to
turn these abstracts ideals into something more tangible and
concrete.
Lest I be
accused of jingoism, I choose a citizen of Japan to show the
universality of the standards I mentioned, and the one that
immediately comes to mind is the example of Hiroo Onoda, the Japanese
soldier who refused to surrender 29 years after WWII ended.
In my book, he
is The Last Samurai.
Onoda, for
those who are not aware, had enlisted in the Imperial Japanese Army
at the age of 20, receiving training in intelligence and guerrilla
warfare.
In December,
1944, he and a small group of elite soldiers were sent to Lubang
Island, at the tip of Mindoro. Their mission was to destroy the
island’s little airstrip and port facilities. They were prohibited,
under any circumstances, from surrendering, or committing suicide.
The division
commander ordered: “You are absolutely forbidden to die by your own
hand. It may take three years, it may take five, but whatever
happens, we'll come back for you. Until then, so long as you have one
soldier, you are to continue to lead him. You may have to live on
coconuts. If that's the case, live on coconuts! Under no
circumstances are you [to] give up your life voluntarily.”
Onoda took
these words literally and seriously, more than the division commander
could ever imagine.
Of coconuts,
Lubang has plenty. And wild animals too, along with those
domesticated by the few inhabitants. Only 16 miles long and six miles
wide, the island is covered with dense forest and Onoda, accompanied
by three other Japanese soldiers, remained in hiding.
It
is a wonder that the four soldiers did not die of malaria. Long
before the war, Mindoro and Palawan had been mosquito-infested places
and few dared to settle here for fear of dying from malaria.
When
Onoda was dropped in Lubang, he was accompanied by three other
soldiers – Private Yuichi Akatsu, Corporal Shoichi Shimada, and
Private First Class Kinshichi Kozuka.
They
carried out guerrilla activities and in the course of their
operations, killed some 30 Filipino islanders and engaged the local
police in several shootouts.
The
United States and Philippine Commonwealth forces took the island when
they landed on February 28, 1945. Within a short time of the landing,
Onoda who had been promoted to lieutenant, ordered his men to take to
the hills.
In
October, 1945, the men stumbled across a leaflet that read: “The
war ended on August 15. Come down from the mountains.”
Believing
it was Allied propaganda, Onoda refused to leave his mountain
redoubt. Couple of months later, the men found a second leaflet
that had been dropped from the air. It was a surrender order issued
by General Tomoyuki Yamashita, commander of the Fourteenth Army.
Once
again, Onoda and his men did not believe it to be genuine and vowed
to continue Japanese resistance.
Four
long years passed, the small band continue to survive in the forest
of Lubang, although, one of the four – Yuichi Akatsu – soon
called it quits. He abandoned his comrades, surrendered to the
Filipino army, and returned to Japan. He informed the army that
three of his comrades still believed the war to be ongoing.
Two
more years elapsed before family photographs and letters were again
airdropped into the forest of Lubang. Onoda found the parcels but
still believed it was part of an elaborate trick. The remaining band
was determined to continue fighting until the bitter end.
They
had little equipment and almost no provisions: We can assume they
survived on wild animals, coconuts, and bananas and occasionally
killing a cow.
Years
turn to decades and the Japanese soldiers felt the ravages of age.
One of Onoda’s comrades was killed by a local in 1954: Another
lived for a further 18 years before being shot in October, 1972.
He
and Onoda had been engaged in a guerrilla raid on Lubang’s food
supplies when they got caught in a shoot-out.
Onoda,
was now alone: the last Japanese soldier still fighting the Second
World War, a conflict that had ended 29 years earlier.
What
was going on in his mind? He was alone but this seemed not to bother
him. He was still conducting guerrilla raids in 1974, when a
traveling Japanese student, Norio Suzuki, made contact with him.
“Onoda
I presume?” we can imagine Suzuki as saying when they met.
This,
in my mind, would be a re-enactment of when Sir Henry Morton Stanley,
born John Rowlands, a Welsh journalist and explorer, who went to
Africa to search for David Livingstone, Scottish Congregationalist
pioneer and medical missionary with the London Missionary Society and
an explorer in Africa.
When
the two met, it gave rise to Stanley allegedly uttering the
now-famous greeting, “Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”
It
must have been an emotional meeting in that Lubang forest in 1974.
The
Last Samurai, frail, but in high spiris, still proudly sporting that
military uniform, shaking hands or probably bowing before a fellow
up-to-date Japanese 30 years after the last great war had
ended.
Despite
Suzuki’s appeal for the soldier to give up, Onoda refused to
believe him. He said would never surrender until he received specific
orders from his superior officer.
Suzuki
went back to Japan to report his encounter with the stubborn Onoda.
This
time, the Japanese government intervened. It wanted to end Onoda’s
surreal war and managed to locate his previous commanding officer,
Major Taniguchi, who was, at that time, still alive.
Taniguchi
was flown to Lubang Island and he told Onoda face-to-face on March 9,
1974: “Japan had lost the war and all combat activity was to cease
immediately.”
Stunned
by what he heard, Onoda blurted: “We really lost the war! How could
they [the Japanese army] have been so sloppy?”
To
us who were not brought up to be so idealistic, Onoda must sound
crazy. But this attitude is what makes the Japanese different from
other peoples. And this kind of behavior is what the military values
in a man.
Onoda,
by then 52 years old, was feted as a national hero on his return to
Japan.
But
his years in the mountains had made him a totally different person.
“Probably
a loner, he disliked the attention and found Japan a mere shadow of
the noble imperial country he had served for so many years,” it was
described by another writer.
We
could envision him now. Had he been born a Filipino, with his
new-found popularity, he would have run for a political position and
handily won.
But
Onoda is Japanese, and despite urgings for him to run for the Diet,
the Japanese parliament, he refused!
Onoda
was reportedly unhappy being the subject of so much attention and
troubled by what he saw as the withering of traditional Japanese
values.
In
April, 1975, he followed the example of his elder brother Tadao and
left Japan for Brazil, where he raised cattle. He married in 1976 and
assumed a leading role in the local Japanese community at Terenos,
Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil, called “Jamic Colony.”
On
reading about a Japanese teenager who had murdered his parents in
1980, Onoda returned to Japan in 1984 and established the Onoda
Shizen Juku ("Onoda Nature School") educational camp for
young people, held at various locations in Japan, Wikipedia said.
Onoda
revisited Lubang Island in 1996, donating US$10,000 for the local
school on Lubang.
His
wife, Machie Onoda, became the head of the conservative Japan Women's
Association in 2006. He currently spends three months of the year in
Brazil. Onoda was awarded the Merit Medal of Santos-Dumont by the
Brazilian Air Force on December 6, 2004. On February 21, 2010, the
Legislative Assembly of Mato Grosso do Sul awarded him the title of
"Cidadão do (citizen of) Mato Grosso do Sul."
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