Junichi
Okada (center) with fellow Zero pilots in The Eternal Zero directed by Takashi
Yamazaki.
Former suicide pilots against celebrating their
plight, and fear horrors of war lost on the young
Kamikaze pilot Yutaka Kanbe
should have died nearly seven decades ago.
It was only Tokyo's
surrender on August 15, 1945, that saved him from the fate of thousands whose
suicide missions came to define Japan's unrelenting defiance in the closing
stages of the second world war.
But as the 91-year-old faces
his own mortality again, he worries that a rightward shift under Japanese Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe, and a recent film glorifying kamikaze missions, are proof
that the horrors of war are lost on younger Japanese generations.
"It was crazy - I
cannot support the idea of glorifying our mission," the former navy pilot
said of young men ordered to crash their planes into allied ships.
"Japan could go to war
again if our leaders are all like Abe. I'm going to die soon, but I worry about
Japan's future."
Kamikaze pilots - the term
means "divine wind" - were heroes in wartime Japan, where their
deadly sacrifice in the name of Emperor Hirohito and the nation was celebrated.
The squadrons were formed
near the end of the conflict in a desperate effort to prevent an allied
victory. About 4,000 died on missions that sent chills down the spine of many
enemy combatants, although most were shot down before reaching their targets.
There are no official
figures on the number of surviving kamikaze pilots and the squadrons have
largely faded from memory, with little mention in contemporary school
textbooks. But a film called The Eternal Zero, based on a best-selling
novel, catapulted the squadrons back into the minds of the public this year.
"I respect kamikaze
pilots - they sacrificed their lives for their families and the country,"
18-year-old Tokyo university student Tsurugi Nakamura said after watching the
film.
"Kamikaze pilots are
cool. It's wrong to criticise the mission," he added.
Kozo Kagawa shares little
enthusiasm for that kind of talk.
The 89-year-old former
kamikaze pilot refuses to judge the morality of the missions, but he is still
haunted by seeing fellow pilots die in vain. His turn never came.
"It's not for survivors
like me to judge whether it was right or wrong. But I'm still mourning the soul
of my late buddy. I'm sorry for letting (him) die alone."
For Kagawa, there is no
question that kamikaze missions were a mistake, but he is less sure about restricting
armed forces to a purely self-defence role.
"Kamikaze missions
should never happen again, but peace does not come without costs," he
said.
"We can't protect peace
without defence. Prime Minister Abe appears to be in a hurry to make changes,
but I understand what he is trying to do."
The landmark shift by Abe to
expand the use of Japan's military was met with strong public opposition and
warnings it could ultimately see the country dragged into war, amid territorial
disputes with Tokyo's neighbours that have stoked fears of an East Asian
conflict.
Any sugar-coating of Japan's
wartime past was misplaced, said Akinori Asano. The 85-year-old belonged to an
infamous force codenamed "Cherry Blossom" which aimed single-engine
bombers at their targets, derided as "stupid bombers" by the allies.
The six-metre aircraft were
more like flying bombs, powered by rocket engines that would run just long
enough to send them spiralling into enemy ships.
"It is nonsense to ask
why we obeyed orders and why we had to die - there was no room for saying
'no'," Asano said.
"But it was not a
movie. I'm afraid young people can't imagine what it was like - all I can do is
pray for peace." South China Morning Post
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