Same thing happened to my family. My dad was on Tarawa and had a trunk that we were allowed to open only after his death. Nothing like this but sad about the loss of life to both sides. Hand to hand combat and few survivors on both sides.
Why isn't anyone asking how he got the flag in the first place? Like what did he do to the Japanese soldier in order to get that flag in his possession. I'm going to assume it must have been brutal if he never talked about his service in the military or the war.
The Japanese military of WW2 were not the victims. They started the war when they sneak attacked us at Pearl Harbor, killing almost 3,000 People in one day. They then went on for years killing civilians, slaughtering prisoners of war and forcing families to jump off cliffs in Okinawa. They were not the victims. Now when I say “they” I do not mean our Japanese allies of today, I mean the brutal Japanese military of WW2.
So much respect for the people of Japan in this Video. Thank you 🙏
I love these stories.🇬🇧🫡🇬🇧
That is amazing....my Father fought in the Pacific theater....
Great! Human kindness!
Now both their families can find peace 🕊️
May the two great nations of the USA & Japan cooperate in peace forevermore.
Same thing happened to my family. My dad was on Tarawa and had a trunk that we were allowed to open only after his death. Nothing like this but sad about the loss of life to both sides. Hand to hand combat and few survivors on both sides.
Awesome ✌️🍷🖤
Why isn't anyone asking how he got the flag in the first place? Like what did he do to the Japanese soldier in order to get that flag in his possession. I'm going to assume it must have been brutal if he never talked about his service in the military or the war.
he killed him obviously
The Japanese military of WW2 were not the victims. They started the war when they sneak attacked us at Pearl Harbor, killing almost 3,000 People in one day. They then went on for years killing civilians, slaughtering prisoners of war and forcing families to jump off cliffs in Okinawa. They were not the victims. Now when I say “they” I do not mean our Japanese allies of today, I mean the brutal Japanese military of WW2.
"A peace that transcends all understanding"
Something some black American blacks could learn from.