Masashi Itō

Masashi Itō (伊藤 正, 1921–2004) was a machine-gunner[1] and sergeant in the Imperial Japanese Army during the Second World War. He was among the last hold-outs to surrender after the war ended.

War years and post-war survival

When the Americans invaded Guam in July 1944, Masashi was separated from his unit.[1] He hid with two other soldiers and learned to survive in the jungle.[1] For sixteen years, he hid even after finding leaflets declaring that the war had ended.[2]

Surrender

When the last of his companions, Bunzō Minagawa (皆川文蔵), was captured by woodsmen in 1960, Masashi was convinced to surrender on 23 May 1960 and was treated at a nearby American military base.[1][3]

Later life

Masashi married on January 7, 1961,[2] and had a daughter. A movie was made about his life. He later worked as a watchman for the Toei Motion Picture Company in Tokyo.[2] He wrote a book about his experiences entitled The Emperor's Last Soldiers, published in 1967.

gollark: But they use powers of two, generally, so 2, 4 and 8.
gollark: There are multi-CPU boards, for servers, I guess.
gollark: No. You would probably need 5 boards.
gollark: In that case, probably just 5 GPUs in some system which supports that, a very good CPU, VMs, and GPU passthrough.
gollark: I have no idea what you're referring to, and I don't really want to go watch a video or whatever to find out.

References

  1. "Books: Straggler's Ordeal". Time Magazine. July 14, 1967.
  2. Kahn, E. J. (March 24, 1962). "II-The Stragglers:: Oh What a Miserable Life This Is!". The New Yorker. p. 47.
  3. Trefalt, Beatrice. Japanese Army stragglers and memories of the war in Japan, 1950–1975.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.