Zach Horner
January 6, 2018
(NOTE: Mr. Virgil Westdale from Michigan. His parents had changed their family name from "Nishimura" because of racial hysteria and he served in the 100th/442nd RCT. )
(NOTE: Mr. Virgil Westdale from Michigan. His parents had changed their family name from "Nishimura" because of racial hysteria and he served in the 100th/442nd RCT. )
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich.--A World War II
veteran celebrated his 100th birthday Saturday by getting his wings back.
Virgil Westdale,
a former Army Air Corps pilot and flight instructor, was stripped of his wings after U.S. officials learned his father was
Japanese, then the focus of extreme paranoia after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
“They just called him into the control
center and told him, ‘Hand me your wings and your pilot’s license.” Without
question, he did what he was told to do and the rest is history,” Virgil
Westdale’s son, Fred Westdale, said.
Virgil Westdale was reassigned to the
all-Japanese 442nd Regimental Combat Team, a highly-decorated unit that went on
to liberate prisoners from the Dachau concentration camp in
Germany in April 1945.
Westdale in Dachau |
“They liberated us, so that’s why I am
still here alive,” Leon Blum, who was a prisoner at Dachau, said Saturday.
“(It’s thanks) to Virgil that I am alive, not hungry anymore, not deprived of
sleep, not heavy labor anymore, not standing roll calls in frigid weather, not
being abused by brute forces, so I feel gratitude.”
The loss of his wings stung, but Westdale
was still proud when he returned home from Europe.
“The Statue of Liberty, it really meant
something, and I saluted her and I held my salute. And she seemed to be saying,
‘Welcome home, soldier,'” Westdale remembered.
He went on to work as a scientist with 25
patents, and after retiring was an airport security guard and Transportation
Security Administration agency for 14 years.
At a 100th
birthday celebration at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum in Grand Rapids,
Westdale stood proudly as his wings were pinned back on.
“He’s a good, Christian, hard-working,
brilliant, gentle, kind, enormously powerful man,” U.S. Army Reserve Lt. Col.
Steve Kenyon, who organized the event, said of Westdale.
Virgil Westdale |
Westdale celebrated with one of his
favorite things to do, sharing a slow ballroom-style dance with his
granddaughter.
Source:
http://woodtv.com/2018/01/06/world-war-ii-veteran-gets-his-wings-back/
No comments:
Post a Comment