Japanese Soldier Found Living in the Jungle

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  • Опубліковано 12 сер 2020
  • CORRECTION: At 0:02 & 1:37 it's 1972. My apologies for the mistake.
    In 1972, a Japanese soldier was found alone living in the jungle of Guam. He lived in secrecy for many years until he was discovered by 2 men while out fishing at night.
    Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
    Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
    creativecommons.org/licenses/b...
    Images and video clips used in this video are under fair use
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 175

  • @lexiheart6558
    @lexiheart6558 3 роки тому +50

    It's crazy that there could have been more hold outs that were never found.

  • @stevekovacs6250
    @stevekovacs6250 Рік тому +23

    I read about this years back and at that moment I realized my brothers and I used to play in the jungle just below the caves. This was back in the early 50's when my Father was stationed there during his Naval career. It was a great playground finding numerous weapons buried throughout the jungle for us to discover.

  • @kissmy_butt1302
    @kissmy_butt1302 3 роки тому +164

    Hide and Seek grand champion.

  • @patrickwithagun1461
    @patrickwithagun1461 4 роки тому +10

    I never get enough of this channel. Very good quality content my friend, keep it up:')

  • @stuckinthe1970
    @stuckinthe1970 4 роки тому +94

    We were stationed in Japan when a Japanese soldier was found in the Philippines. This is an example of loyalty to one's country to stay hidden and continue to fight for so many years after the war ended. I remember the search team sent from Japan carried megaphones talking into the jungle to find him and convince him the war was over.

    • @chozer1
      @chozer1 3 роки тому +6

      shoulda gotten hirohito to announce it to them, they can't disobey an order from the emperor

    • @MatthewLum11
      @MatthewLum11 2 роки тому +7

      @@chozer1 Lt. Hiroo Sonoda, the holdout in the Philippines, was an intelligence officer. He believed all the megaphone announcements and dropped leaflets were propaganda.
      It is unlikely that the head of state of any country, much less Emperor Hirohito would travel to another nation to plead from a megaphone for a group of four soldiers while his own country, Japan, was being occupied by the one million-strong Allied Forces.
      While Hirohito remained Emperor when the war officially ended, the new 1947 Constitution stripped him of all but symbolic power. Most Japanese authority transferred to the new position of "prime minister" when the Allied Forces ended their occupation in 1952. 💁🏻‍♂️

    • @robertbutts9835
      @robertbutts9835 Рік тому +1

      I have been there during 2002.. Amazing place

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Рік тому +11

      Blind, loyalty. He squandered almost his whole adult life for a militaristic government that thought nothing of sending soldiers on suicide attacks.

    • @will-i-am-not
      @will-i-am-not Рік тому

      Or stupidity

  • @lon242
    @lon242 4 роки тому +19

    Huh, I'm from Guam and know about this dude but not as familiar with the whole story. Great presentation, love your channel.

  • @KowboyUSA
    @KowboyUSA 4 роки тому +17

    What true grit is. Salute!

  • @yvemd11
    @yvemd11 3 роки тому +39

    I remember my Dad talking in Chamorro on the phone late at night. My Dad then talked with my Mom in the kitchen when I should have been sleeping. My Dad explained to my Mom that his brother Manuel and his cousin Jesus found a Japanese soldier in Guam. My Dad told Uncle Manuel to make sure he eats something, and the authorities should be notified so he can be reunited with his family.

    • @Ramzi1944
      @Ramzi1944 3 роки тому +4

      Thats interesting

    • @Tremorwoodworks
      @Tremorwoodworks 2 роки тому +2

      Manuel De Garcia and Jesus Duenas

    • @sneed2600
      @sneed2600 2 роки тому +2

      Small damn world, huh

    • @yeetfeet731
      @yeetfeet731 2 роки тому

      So many member in my family named Manuel and Jesus lmao. Us Chamorros can't give up to any other name, huh?

    • @tonywalton1052
      @tonywalton1052 Рік тому +2

      That's nothing. my uncle dropped the atomic bomb on hiroshima. the song, "you drop the bomb on me" is about him.

  • @troynov1965
    @troynov1965 4 роки тому +13

    I remember as a kid when the talked the Japanese solider to give himself up in the Phillipines back in early -mid 70s

  • @rtmlandscapingjunkremoval1875
    @rtmlandscapingjunkremoval1875 4 роки тому +2

    Great channel. Love the vids. Very informative.

  • @saint52vvs
    @saint52vvs 4 роки тому +38

    I worked on Saipan. I crawled through Japanese tunnels. There are multiple stories like this one. So insane

    • @StacyNelsaGirl
      @StacyNelsaGirl Рік тому +1

      Not Insane..

    • @user-yh2fn1jt9f
      @user-yh2fn1jt9f Рік тому

      a+ for discipline.those Japanese dudes were ...... determined to honour their code shall we say.

  • @IfUSeekAndy
    @IfUSeekAndy 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for the info! Another great vid!

  • @RobertJones-ux6nc
    @RobertJones-ux6nc Рік тому +5

    My Dad was on Guam in the late 1950's when they found a Japanese Soldier living in the jungle. I know it is not as long as this one but there might still be others today, who knows?

  • @mymysea4435
    @mymysea4435 3 роки тому +2

    Just wanted to leave a comment saying I love your channel. So refreshing to not hear a robotic voice too.

  • @marcnoonan2187
    @marcnoonan2187 Рік тому +2

    He was found on Guam. I was stationed on a Ship Homeported at Apra Harbor Guam 1990-1992. USS Haleakala (AE-25)

  • @celestialstar5563
    @celestialstar5563 4 роки тому +38

    Wow this is a pretty smart & crazy story of survival of the fittest

  • @coachferatu198
    @coachferatu198 4 роки тому +21

    truly amazing videos and of course top notch narration as always

  • @donnageorge6506
    @donnageorge6506 4 роки тому +1

    awesome narration n story ty for that

  • @naenae796
    @naenae796 3 роки тому +17

    Just now came across this. Lived on Guam 1963 through 1966. Dad was stationed at Anderson AFB on the north end of the island. We always heard stories about the three Japanese ‘ stragglers ‘ still living in the jungle and that they would steal western garments off clothesline’s then sneak on base to receive bags of rice that the government would give to Guamanians.

    • @Tremorwoodworks
      @Tremorwoodworks 2 роки тому +3

      *Andersen

    • @naenae796
      @naenae796 2 роки тому +2

      @@Tremorwoodworks Thank you . Darn autocorrect !

    • @jerrybennett7856
      @jerrybennett7856 Рік тому +3

      What was your dad's name. I was stationed there 65-66 in the weather squadron and attached to the Air Rescue squadron.

    • @sarahboller5912
      @sarahboller5912 Рік тому +3

      my daughter lived there for 2018 to 2021..I've heard of this , I always wondered if he ate his 2 friends...the island is beyond gorgeous, and the chammorrans are very proud, peaceful people ❤

  • @livilou5075
    @livilou5075 3 роки тому +2

    This was awesome, loved the narration!

  • @thomasrobinette3227
    @thomasrobinette3227 Рік тому +6

    3:48
    How could he hear news about the other dudes dying in a flood?

  • @Kainlarsen
    @Kainlarsen 4 роки тому +23

    An inspiration to shut-ins everywhere. :)
    In all seriousness though, this must have been such a crushingly lonely existence; unable to come home for fear of being ostracised.

  • @cadillacdeville5828
    @cadillacdeville5828 4 роки тому +1

    Yippee 😁😊 it's been FOREVER 😭. Glad you uploaded 🤗

  • @jerrybennett7856
    @jerrybennett7856 Рік тому +18

    There was a funny rumor about him on Guam when I was stationed there. The Guamians in one village told me that they had contact with him. Sometimes giving him clothing and some food. They said he did not want to go home because he had a nagging wife. I thought that was a funny story.

    • @vukojicasandic3773
      @vukojicasandic3773 Рік тому +2

      So people on the island knew there were Japanese soldiers still hiding 20 years later?

    • @rrussell9731
      @rrussell9731 Рік тому +1

      So now we know why he was begging the two guys to kill him. Makes sense.

  • @strfltcmnd.9925
    @strfltcmnd.9925 3 роки тому +11

    Damn fine Soldiers. They should have been given a teaching post at West Point on evasion and stealth.

    • @Scrub_Zero
      @Scrub_Zero Рік тому +1

      Too bad about the way they frequently enslaved and horrifically tortured their enemies, sometimes under the guise of performing bizarre medical experiments on them and other times for no discernable reason other than sadism....

    • @jeffclark7888
      @jeffclark7888 Рік тому +1

      @@Scrub_Zeroagree.

  • @marcossantos1998
    @marcossantos1998 4 роки тому +8

    How the fuck you go through all this shit and still manage to get a "happy ending"? what a soldier

    • @triepope6429
      @triepope6429 Рік тому +2

      Do you really need to used that word !!!! Do you fell really BIG NOW ?????

  • @kyupified2440
    @kyupified2440 4 роки тому +6

    I remember hearing a story about a japanese soldier hiding too after a war. He doesnt want to believe that the japanese people want him back to their country and that they lost the war

  • @mansuetobadionurbangardene1748
    @mansuetobadionurbangardene1748 2 роки тому

    Nice video. Narration is clear.

  • @danielmurphy4429
    @danielmurphy4429 Рік тому

    My Uncle, aunt and cousins have lived on Guam since the mid sixties, with Joe Murphy running the local newspaper. I remember he called my dad, telling him of the capture of this extraordinary soldier and hoping to secure the rights to his remarkable story.

  • @louispoliskie7708
    @louispoliskie7708 4 роки тому +5

    Really good content. Fantastic upload.

  • @myflock000
    @myflock000 4 роки тому +1

    hey already new video nice ty!
    definitely interesting great video!

  • @JOSECANUCCJ
    @JOSECANUCCJ Рік тому +3

    I have visited a reconstruction of the site. As I started down a ladder to enter it, I was assaulted by a cloud of insects. How he endured that escapes me.

  • @thra5herxb12s
    @thra5herxb12s Рік тому +3

    He was never captured or surrendered. His honour is completely intact.

    • @Yungknown
      @Yungknown 5 місяців тому +1

      He waisted his life hiding in the jungle. The only shame is on the emperor who sent so many young men to die for no good reason.

  • @kujo5998
    @kujo5998 Рік тому +3

    “He got the news that the other 2 had died”…
    None of this story makes you suspicious?!

  • @Cam-jl6yo
    @Cam-jl6yo 4 роки тому

    Those editing skills👌

  • @kareneyescream4339
    @kareneyescream4339 4 роки тому +1

    love the story!!

  • @123watc
    @123watc Рік тому

    Incredible story ❤

  • @jshicke
    @jshicke Рік тому

    I arrived in Guam a year after he was finally captured.

  • @taylormartinez7586
    @taylormartinez7586 3 роки тому +3

    POV: You're from Guam and this showed up in your recommended.

  • @johnnyv.5142
    @johnnyv.5142 Рік тому +1

    Didn't they make a movie about this amazing story?

  • @guyanaspice6730
    @guyanaspice6730 3 роки тому +2

    Bridge on the River Kwai - "Madness. Madness."

  • @aislinnkeilah7361
    @aislinnkeilah7361 Рік тому

    Amazing survival story.

  • @skepticskull
    @skepticskull 3 роки тому +1

    I think I've heard about him before

  • @raymondsteptore5062
    @raymondsteptore5062 Рік тому +1

    Situations like this is how He reminds us of His ever presence in our lives. We need to start listening, today.

    • @mommaweathers3620
      @mommaweathers3620 8 місяців тому

      So true.. God Almighty was with him and even though he struggles God maintain him.

  • @bayongasantv9657
    @bayongasantv9657 3 роки тому +5

    Hiroo onoda hiding 30 years after the war ended in the Philippines, the last Japanese soldier surrendered.

    • @Akaneblaze1345
      @Akaneblaze1345 2 роки тому

      Oh quiet, just cause he was the last soldier doesn't mean the Phillipines is better.

  • @aureissimus
    @aureissimus Рік тому

    They didn't show the newsreel of when he descended from the plane and met his parents after so many years. How did they react? They bowed to each other.

  • @freeagent8225
    @freeagent8225 Рік тому

    I remember this story, I've spent over 60 years hiding in my city😅.

  • @RacerX1971
    @RacerX1971 Рік тому +3

    Imagine u did all of this sacrifice for an emperor that you thought was God like.

  • @vladimirputindreadlockrast812
    @vladimirputindreadlockrast812 Рік тому +5

    I've lived by the words of one of those Japanese soldiers (I read this decades ago, before there were any personal computers, so I don't remember which one): "Nature is never boring."

    • @jadegrenade8287
      @jadegrenade8287 7 місяців тому +1

      It's where we truly belong, not in war's for the mega rich who'll never put themselves in harms way themselves.

  • @shaungronda2759
    @shaungronda2759 6 місяців тому +2

    He stole my grandfathers underwear and clothes at night during the Korean War. As they were the same sized men. He survived on our military food that was taken at night also.

  • @F111BMATHIS
    @F111BMATHIS Рік тому +1

    No mention of his airliner flight back to Japan and what he thought of Japanese society.

  • @jasonlopez5913
    @jasonlopez5913 4 роки тому +2

    Excited

  • @eugen189763987689379
    @eugen189763987689379 4 роки тому

    6:30 - so much orbs!

  • @angelaortiz3406
    @angelaortiz3406 4 роки тому

    Good one That was interesting

  • @harrybalsak916
    @harrybalsak916 Рік тому +1

    I was born on Saipan in 1958 while my Dad was a Navy Physician there. There were still Japanese coming out of the jungle surrendering. We thought "Hey Tojo, you have not heard gunfire in 13 years, that is what we call a clue". In one instance the Saipanese caught a Japanese soldier stealing from their lobster traps. The snatched him and were ready to kill him but the Navy intervened on his behalf. They should have just turned a blind eye and let the villagers have at him. 13 years after the war there were still a lot of Saipanese natives who remembered the horrific treatment the Japanese heaped on them. One of the natives told my Dad that prior to the US landings there the Japanese hid in the caves along with many natives, presumably to use them as bargaining chips. Apparently, there was an infant who continued to cry so this Japanese soldier bayoneted the infant and then bayonetted the mother and tossed their bodies off a cliff. That kind of brutality is so foreign to western culture it is hard to comprehend.

  • @bruceyung70
    @bruceyung70 Рік тому

    Great job! Promoted!

  • @alanmiller9681
    @alanmiller9681 Рік тому +2

    I have been to the spot on Guam where he was discovered. The most remote part of the island.

  • @lemuellopena1157
    @lemuellopena1157 3 роки тому

    he is interacting with hiroo onoda

  • @largeformat942
    @largeformat942 2 роки тому +5

    Amazing he built a life for himself in the jungle but how did he get his email?

  • @ynot2847
    @ynot2847 Рік тому +1

    Although the war was over, the war perhaps continues inside his own nightmarish dreamscapes..

  • @dennisschell5543
    @dennisschell5543 3 роки тому +3

    WTF is a "small bonfire"?!? 🙄

  • @philipbuckley759
    @philipbuckley759 Рік тому +1

    why this one was allowed to wander, in the forest, for so many years is really quite pathetic.....

  • @curtisthomas2670
    @curtisthomas2670 Рік тому +1

    I hope he got his decades of military backpay

  • @cbm2156
    @cbm2156 Рік тому

    He must have been very old, plus I am sure his enlistment had run out long ago.

  • @alphabacks5089
    @alphabacks5089 11 місяців тому

    I cant imagine hearing about the nuclear explosion and still want to fight .

  • @balboa32
    @balboa32 Рік тому +1

    How did he hear the news that they died from a flood

  • @lugd441
    @lugd441 6 місяців тому

    This guy and hiroo onoda should be friends

  • @jeremyuptown9800
    @jeremyuptown9800 Рік тому

    Did he kill anyone while he was hiding after he knew the war had ended?

  • @babylonsburning1
    @babylonsburning1 2 роки тому +3

    A real soldier.

  • @OTMaraH
    @OTMaraH 3 роки тому +2

    Hey i was born march 31!!

    • @119jle
      @119jle 4 місяці тому

      Who cares

  • @IcanbePsycho
    @IcanbePsycho Рік тому +1

    I saw this on Gilligan’s Island 😂

  • @Islander_Vibes670
    @Islander_Vibes670 3 роки тому +6

    its chamorros not chamarros

  • @ledenhimeganidleshitz144
    @ledenhimeganidleshitz144 Рік тому

    He must be owed a lot of back pay!

  • @frantsel5711
    @frantsel5711 Рік тому +1

    Wow, what a legend.

  • @ScoutSniper3124
    @ScoutSniper3124 2 роки тому +1

    I wonder if he got BACKPAY for those years in the Jungle by the Japanese military, and did they Retire him with benefits?

  • @ronniewhitehead6968
    @ronniewhitehead6968 3 роки тому +1

    Kensukes kingdom

  • @skroopo
    @skroopo 15 днів тому

    0:57 that is not the spelling and pronounciation of Chamorros

  • @mah6786
    @mah6786 3 роки тому +2

    What's with the fireflies in the footage? Trying too hard to make it look vintage?

  • @thomasrobinette3227
    @thomasrobinette3227 Рік тому

    Did they say John wick?

  • @MasterKenfucius
    @MasterKenfucius Рік тому

    Suggestion for you: Adding fake dust flying around on the videos is very distracting. It's hard to pay attention with all that junk flying around.

  • @chinoman7234
    @chinoman7234 Рік тому

    I knew this guy back in Japan

  • @BSU55
    @BSU55 Рік тому

    The 3 Japanese in the Philippines lasted 29 years.

  • @user-nj4no9py6p
    @user-nj4no9py6p 9 місяців тому

    Уважение.

  • @pssst_cute
    @pssst_cute 7 місяців тому

    Hes beyond scared... Scared ...shame

  • @Ratatouillesky
    @Ratatouillesky 3 роки тому

    John wick?

  • @119jle
    @119jle 4 місяці тому +1

    All those years with no McDonalds

  • @cafe3682
    @cafe3682 3 роки тому

    The last chicken 🍗 on the plate

  • @brucefranklin1317
    @brucefranklin1317 2 роки тому +1

    Poor dude born in a time of racism and war... i pity him. I wonder how his 30 years went. At least he wasnt in no more war. Living a solitary life

  • @inigochicano
    @inigochicano Рік тому

    Bro is better at hiding than the Vietnamese

  • @JerryDLTN
    @JerryDLTN Рік тому +1

    Acting to avoid AWOL?

  • @119jle
    @119jle 4 місяці тому

    We can’t even get generation Z to show up to work on time or at all

  • @Adam-lz6cr
    @Adam-lz6cr Рік тому +1

    Second greatest form of dedication I have ever seen in my life. The first greatest form of dedication is the US media protecting Biden.

  • @frankiefernandez9225
    @frankiefernandez9225 11 місяців тому

    ❤️❤️❤️🇬🇺🇬🇺🇬🇺

  • @seggbefsz
    @seggbefsz Рік тому

    KAMASZUKA!

  • @pssst_cute
    @pssst_cute 7 місяців тому

    Hero? Hes scared..hero? Shameless...

  • @fury9228
    @fury9228 Рік тому

    Yu may is qar yu mau

  • @Gia39
    @Gia39 11 місяців тому

    It’s Chamorros not Chamarros

  • @peterkirgan2921
    @peterkirgan2921 Рік тому

    Personally I would have thrown him in jail served a sentence but given him utmost care humanitarily!!!! Lol

  • @russellcraddock3529
    @russellcraddock3529 Рік тому

    It's kinda sad that this japanese army member got lost from his company and his out all of these years thinking that the war is going on! Thank God they found him bit confused and scared because he failed his country. And emperor. Now that is being loyal. To the cause. Hopefully he can recover and have a good rest of his life!

  • @josemonteiro6112
    @josemonteiro6112 Рік тому

    Estes foram os maiores bandidos da história, tiveram o merecido, foram trucidados.