February 22, 2013

Terry Shima Presidential Citizens Medal



WWII Veteran Terry Shima Awarded the Presidential Citizens Medal
By Lieutenant Janelle Kuroda, JAG Corps, U.S. Navy

     WASHINGTON – At a ceremony in the East Room of the White House on Feb. 15, 2013, President Obama awarded World War II veteran Terry T. Shima the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal, the nation’s second-highest civilian award. Shima was one of 18 recipients of the medal, hand-selected by the President from over 6,000 candidates for “strengthening the sacred trust between America and its veterans.”

In his remarks, President Obama recognized recipients “for the shining example that you set every single day and the inspiration that you give each of us as fellow citizens, including your President.”

 Photo: February 15, 2013 – President Obama awards Terry T. Shima with the 2012 Presidential Citizens Medal at a ceremony in the East Wing of the White House. (Photo by the Japanese American Veterans Association)

     Shima, 90, of Gaithersburg, Md., was born and raised in Laupahoehoe, Hawaii and served in the Army’s 442nd Regimental Combat Team, a segregated unit comprised of Japanese Americans, which became one of the most decorated units of its size in American history. Shima “ensured returning heroes received a welcome befitting their service and sacrifice.” Shima’s award citation recognized his work “as the Executive Director of the Japanese American Veterans Association, where he committed himself to preserving the stories of service members who fought and bled overseas, even while many of their families were relocated to internment camps at home.”

     Shima’s family members, brother Hiroshi Shima of Hilo, Hawaii, son Michael Shima of Philadelphia, Pa., daughter Eileen Roulier and son-in-law Richard Roulier of Potomac, Md., traveled to the White House to view the ceremony.

     When asked what his reactions were in receiving this award, Shima said, “In a word, awesome.” He said, “There are others far more deserving to receive this Medal than I, however, having been designated, I accept this award on behalf of my family who has given me their total support.”

     “I am so proud of my father,” said Shima’s daughter, Eileen Roulier. “Our family sees how deeply he cares and how hard he works to tell the Japanese American story, but he certainly never expected this medal. It’s an incredible gift of recognition,” said Roulier. “I believe in his heart he shares this honor, completely and thoroughly, with my mother, who supported him throughout their 65 years of marriage. What an amazing team. I am profoundly grateful for the inspiration and guidance they’ve given me over the years.”

     “I accept this medal on behalf of the volunteers at the Japanese American Veterans Association and for the men who fought in Europe and the Pacific, including my older brother, Hideichi Shimabukuro, to settle the question of loyalty once and for all and to help level the playing field for minorities,” said Shima. “I also accept this medal for the over 800 men we left on the battlefields of Europe and the Pacific, and for the post-World War II Japanese American men and women who competed with the best-of-the-best to build America’s greatness.”

     Gerald Yamada, President of the Japanese American Veterans Association, praised Shima’s service. “This award recognizes Terry’s tireless efforts as a 442nd Regimental Combat Team veteran, as Executive Director, and now as the chairperson of our Education and Public Outreach Committee to preserve the legacy of the contributions of the World War II Nisei soldiers. Terry brings honor to all of us.”

     “Given all the work, time, dedication and effort that Terry has expended over all these years on behalf of the veterans and the total community, there is no one who is more deserving of this recognition,” said former Secretary of Transportation and Secretary of Commerce Norman Mineta. “I know that the thousands of Japanese American veterans who served in World War II and those who ultimately made the supreme sacrifice on behalf of all of us are really smiling and saying ‘Well done, Terry, and thanks a million!’”

Source: http://javadc.org/news/press-release/wwii-veteran-terry-shima-awarded-the-presidential-citizens-medal/



February 2, 2013

Go fo' Broke!




About  Eric Saul 
    He served as curator of the Military Museum at the Presidio of San Francisco from 1973-1986.  In 1980, he co-founded the Go for Broke 100th/442/MIS Foundation (later called the National Japanese American Historical Society).  He was curator from 1981- 1987, producing exhibits including, "East to America", which chronicled the story of Japanese American immigration to the United States, and an exhibit entitled, "Unlikely Liberators" on the Japanese American soldiers of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion who liberated the infamous Dachau Death March.
  Here is a speech  by Eric Saul, US Army historian, given at the ceremony to honor Medal of Honor winners William K. Nakamura and James Okubo in Seattle, Washington on March 25, 2001.
 
So why was it you, Nisei, second generation, born in America, 
were willing to volunteer for the Army from the plantations of Hawaii
often when you were considered second-class citizens,
or from concentration camps in America?

 
Your parents couldn't become citizens or own land,
so land was put in your name.
Before the war, you wanted to be doctors, lawyers,
and professionals, but you couldn't.

No one would hire you.

So you worked on your family farms, flower orchards, and shops..
You were often segregated in the Little Tokyos and Japantowns.
You couldn't go where you wanted, be where you wanted, be whom you wanted.
 
Furthermore, your President, on February 19,1942,
signed an Executive Order that said you weren't Americans anymore,
you were "non-aliens."

So  why did you join the Army?

Why did you become soldiers, and ironically become, of all things,
the most decorated Army unit that this country has ever produced?

There were words like giri and on, which your parents taught you.
Which means "duty," and "honor," and "responsibility."
You had to pay back your debt to your country.

Oyakoko: love for family.

Your parents couldn't become citizens, but you loved your families

AND you had to prove your loyalty at any cost.
You used your bodies as hostages for your families
to prove your love for democracy and justice
when you volunteered from those camps.

Kodomo no tame ni: "for the sake of the children."

Many of you didn't have children at the  time,
but you knew you wanted to have families.
And you knew that you didn't want your children to have to suffer as you did.
You wanted your children to be able to be doctors, and lawyers,
and professionals.  

If you went into the military, did your job, perhaps things would change.
You knew it, and you fought for it.
You even came up with your own regimental motto
that's on this honored regimental flag in front of me.

It was "Go for Broke."

You set the tone for your own regiment, and lived up to its motto.
You made democracy work.
 
Because of your wartime record,
your children can now be what they want in a country that you wanted for them.

Enryo: humility.

There's an old Japanese proverb that says if you do something really good

and you don't talk about it, it must be really, really good!
You never talked about your wartime record.
You didn't tell your children, you didn't tell your wives,
and you didn't even tell the country.

Gaman: internal fortitude, keep your troubles to yourself.
Don't show how you're hurting.

Shikata ga nai: sometimes things can't be helped.

But other times, you have to go for broke, and you can change things.

Haji: don't bring shame on your family.
When you go off to war, fight for your country, return if you can, but die if you must.

Shinbo shite seiko suru: strength and success will grow out of adversity.

When I was curator of the Presidio Museum,
I wanted to know why you joined the Army.
Why did you join from a concentration camp?

A veteran from Cannon Company named Wally told me a story.
His family was sent from Los Angeles to the Santa Anita racetrack,
which was an Assembly Center for Japanese Americans.
There, they were put in a horse stall.
Before the war, they had a flower shop,
they had their own home in Los Angeles,
and they were a middle-class family.
Now they were living for weeks in a horse stall that hadn't been cleaned when they moved in, and it stunk of horse manure.
 Wally's father said to him,
"Remember that a lot of good things grow in horse manure."
 It did.

I remember hearing a story from a Chaplain Higuchi,
the chaplain of the 442nd, who was from Hawaii.
I asked him, "How could the Niseis have joined the Army under these circumstances?
How could they have done what they did?"

Chaplain Higuchi said he himself couldn't understand,
because he was from Hawaii
and hadn't suffered the same discrimination.
But his job as chaplain was to go through the pockets of the Niseis
who had been killed in combat.

He remembered going through the pockets of one mainland Nisei.

In his wallet was a news clipping that told how the family farm
had been burned down by racists near Auburn, California .
Yet this Nisei still volunteered for the service.

Chaplain Higuchi said that there was no medal high enough in this country
to give to this Nisei who had been killed and was lying in front of him.
 
Chaplain Higuchi had to write a letter home to his parents.

You Nisei fought for this country, your country.
It has taken fifty-six years to get to this point,
but you made democracy stand for what it really means.

When you came home from the war,
President Truman had a special White House ceremony for you.
It was the only time that the President of the United States
had a ceremony at the White House for a unit as small as a battalion.
 
It was raining that morning in Washington,
and Truman's aide said, "Let's cancel the ceremony."
Truman said to his aide, "After what those boys have been through,
I can stand a little rain."

He said to the Niseis, bearing their regimental standard
with the motto of "Go for Broke,"
"I can't tell you how much I appreciate the opportunity to tell you
 what you have done for this country.
You fought not only the enemy, but you fought prejudice and you won.
You have made the Constitution stand for what it really means:
the welfare of all the people, all the time."

Lastly, he advised the Niseis to keep up that fight.
So in the 1980's you fought for redress.
One of the reasons that redress passed so overwhelmingly in Congress
 was the overwhelming record of the 100th/442nd and the MIS.

The Civil Liberties Act of 1988 provided an apology
 for your parents and for your suffering.

So on the battlefields of France, Italy and Germany,
"Go for Broke" stood for the welfare of all of the people,
all of the time.

You never lost faith in your country, and we are here today to celebrate that faith.
The result of that faith is that your children can be anything that they want: professionals, doctors, and lawyers.
The price that you paid for democracy
was the highest combat casualty rate of any regiment that served
 in the United States Army.
The 100th/442nd suffered 314% combat casualties.
The 100th/442nd was an oversized regiment, with its own cannon and engineer company, and even its own artillery battalion.

The four thousand men who started off in February of 1943
had to be replaced nearly three and one half times.
Eventually, about 14,000 men would serve in the 100th/442nd.

I see many of my friends from I Company and K Company here today.

In one battle alone, the battle for the Rescue of the Lost Battalion
 in October 1944, which you fought in,
two thousand of you went in to rescue two hundred Texas soldiers
who couldn't be rescued by their own division.
You went and suffered almost a thousand casualties in that one battle alone,
of almost five days of constant fighting.
In K Company, you started off with 186 riflemen.
By the time you reached the Lost Battalion,
there were only eight men standing.
It was unbelievable!

You rescued the Texas Lost Battalion,
and for that you won two presidential unit citations.
The Army designated the Rescue of the Lost Battalion
to be among the top ten battles fought by the U.S. Army in its 230-year history.
You Niseis ultimately won seven unit citations,
and no other unit for its size and length of service
has won that many presidential unit citations.  

Chet Tanaka counted how many citations and how many medals
the 100th/442nd earned.
Of the fourteen thousand men who served,
there were eighteen thousand medals for heroism and service.

You had become the most decorated unit in American military
history for its size and length of service.
The US Army had three infantry divisions lined up to breach the Gothic Line,
which protected the Po Valley and the entrance to Austria ..

And those three divisions couldn't do it - they were stalemated for six months.
The Army then asked the 442nd, the "Go for Broke" Regiment, to break the stalemate.

The commander and officers of the 100th/442nd said to the commander of the 92nd Division, "General Almond, we have a plan.
We can create a diversionary attack and break the Gothic Line
if you give us 24 hours.
The General figuratively fell out of his chair and said,
 "Impossible. We've had three divisions hammering away at the Gothic Line."

The Germans had their best SS Divisions on the mountains
and it was considered an impenetrable fortress.
He told the Niseis to "Just create a diversionary attack
and we'll do the rest."

But you Nisei soldiers had your own plan.  You were smart.
Your average age was about twenty and your average IQ was 116,
which was eight points higher than necessary to be an officer in the Army.
You were barely a hundred twenty-five pounds soaking wet, but you were college-educated, and you were going to "Go for Broke."

So you climbed up that mountain called Mount Fogarito,

which the Germans had so heavily fortified.
You climbed it where they didn't expect you.
It was nearly a 4,000-foot vertical precipice.
You climbed the mountain that was unclimbable, in combat gear.
The Germans couldn't possibly expect an attack from that point..
From nighttime until dawn you climbed, almost eight hours..

Men fell down as they climbed the mountain,
and no man cried out as he fell.
You took the mountain and you broke the Gothic Line.

It didn't take 24 hours, as you thought, or a few weeks,
as the Army had planned.
It didn't take six months.
The U.S. Army reported that you broke the Gothic Line in only thirty-four minutes!

If the story of the 100th/442nd is unbelievable,
there is a more unbelievable story.
It is the story of the Military Intelligence and Language Service.
More than 6,000 Niseis served throughout the Pacific
in a super-secret branch of the military.
Niseis provided the eyes and ears of intelligence and language skills
that helped to break the stalemate in the Pacific.
They broke secret codes, interrogated prisoners,
provided valuable propaganda, and translated millions of documents
to help win the war in the Pacific.

By the war's end, General Willoughby, General MacArthur's chief of intelligence,
 declared that the Nisei shortened the war by two years
and saved a million Allied lives.

Never had so many owed so much to so few.
I only wish that a million people could be here to hear your story
and know of your service. 

I wish every American could know your story.

We owe a great debt of honor to you Niseis
for what you did for the country and for democracy.  

It is a debt that can never be repaid.

I am here to tell the story for your children,
because I know you can't say it
.
It is a legacy that they must carry on and
remember what you did for them and for all of us.
Your legacy continues to protect us all.

I remember during the Iranian crisis that there was talk of
keeping Iranian Americans possibly in protective custody.
Senators Daniel Inouye and Spark Matsunaga said, "You can't do that.
That's already been done, and you were wrong then.

"So your wartime service protects all of us.
You did make the Constitution stand for all of the people,
all of the time.
History works.
You made it work, and you made it work for me, for your children, and for this country.

President Ronald Reagan remembered,

when he signed the bill enacting the Civil Liberties Act of 1988,
which was called House Resolution 442,
that blood that has soaked into the sands of a beach
is all of one color.
America stands unique in the world, the only country not founded on race.
but a way, an ideal.
You Niseis came home, and professions and could go
 where you wanted and do what you wanted to do.
 You went about your lives, but you made sure that your parents could become citizens.

By 1953, you saw your parents naturalized.
Your parents had to wait, in some cases, sixty-five years to become American citizens.  And that they could own land for the first time.
And that others of Asian descent could own land for the first time.

Your greatest success was that your children could be what they wanted to be,
without the discrimination that you suffered.
Some of you became lawmakers and entered the House and the Senate.
There were more than 590 laws in California in the 19th
and the early 20th century against Asians.
You fought a fight to make sure those laws were challenged
and overturned one by one.

We thank the Japanese American senators,
Sparky Matsunaga and Dan Inouye, veterans of the 100th/442nd, for doing that.

We thank you for your providing the legacy
upon which they could fight for those rights.  

Justice prevailed, and your parents became citizens.
We stand at a pinnacle of your history in your golden years.
Redress passed and a nation apologized for a terrible injustice
perpetrated against its own citizens.

A few months ago at the White House,

President Clinton belatedly awarded 20 Medals of Honor to Japanese Americans.
Clinton stated in his speech of the Niseis that
 "in the face of painful prejudice,
they helped to define America at its Best."

Last night I was speaking to one of my K Company friends, Tosh Okamoto,
and he said to me, "You know, the awarding of the Medals of Honor to our boys
is sort of the icing on the cake.  
I've sort of been angry for a long time at my country
and what happened to us during the internment.
Getting redress and the apology,
and having the country recognize my buddies,
lifted a cloud from my head.

I now really feel like I'm truly American, and it was all worth it."

So this is the happy ending of the 100th/442nd/MIS story,
and I thank you for sharing it with us.

 I salute you.

God bless you.  And tell your kids to tell the world!