["itemContainer",{"xmlns:xsi":"http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance","xsi:schemaLocation":"http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd","uri":"https://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/items/browse?advanced%5B0%5D%5Belement_id%5D=49&advanced%5B0%5D%5Btype%5D=is+exactly&advanced%5B0%5D%5Bterms%5D=US+Armed+Forces-Army&output=omeka-json","accessDate":"2024-03-28T12:05:56-07:00"},["miscellaneousContainer",["pagination",["pageNumber","1"],["perPage","10"],["totalResults","3"]]],["item",{"itemId":"134389","public":"1","featured":"1"},["fileContainer",["file",{"fileId":"20826"},["src","https://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/files/original/bd7f8d25e454a64ba0dca9b694d0dcb0.pdf"],["authentication","6a5f948fd7268b098f861ef418506a52"],["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"7"},["name","PDF Text"],["description"],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"94"},["name","Text"],["description"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"1899607"},["text","Go for Broke: 442nd Regimental Combat Team\nBy Tracy L. Barnett\n\nNisei unit fought with distinction—Japanese–American GIs recount stories of war\nWATSONVILLE—Nobody has to tell Tom Goto he's a hero. Long ago, he gave away the official recognition of his bravery:\na Purple Heart. He's not one to tell war stories. After 50 years, he still shakes his head quietly and says, \"I don't need to\nremember those things. I'd rather forget.\"\nLeft for dead with a belly full of shrapnel in the Vosges Mountains of France, Goto says it's enough to just be alive. The\nself-effacing silence of Goto and his companion of the \"Go For Broke\" 100th/442nd Regimental Combat Team kept a\ngeneration of Japanese–American heroes in the shadows of U.S. history for decades. Scores of the former members of\nthe most-decorated military unit in World War II came from Santa Cruz County, most from Watsonville.\nIt was members of the 442nd who shot the lock off the gate at Dachau; they fought their way through the Vosges\nMountains to rescue the \"Lost Battalion.\" They accomplished the deadly ambush of Italy's Gothic Line, climbing a cliff in\nsilence and total darkness as some fell to their deaths without uttering so much as a whimper.\nUntil now, they've kept their history folded away in the closet along with their medals. But the time has come for their\nstory to be told. \"I think the ice has been broken, and it's OK to talk now,\" said Terri DeBono, a Monterey filmmaker who\njust completed a documentary on the 442nd, \"Beyond Barbed Wire.\" The Film will cap off the Pacific Rim Film Festival\nwith a Monday screening at the Fox Theater in Watsonville, follow by a reception for the veterans.\n\"They're so full of humility, self-effacing; they give credit to everyone else but themselves,\" said DeBono. \"They'll tell you\nwhat their buddy did, but they won't tell you what they did.\"\nDeBono and her partner Steve Rosen, who directed the film, befriended Monterey veteran Yokio Sumida and his wife,\nMollie.\nYokio finally said, \"If we don' tell this story, who will?\"\nWe were just amazed at the story of these small men and what they were asked to do. They were put at the head of\nmany of the battles and were so determined prove their loyalty.\nThey were fighting like mad men. ... I can't believe we don't know this story, that it slipped by the pages of history.\nSome of the men went straight from the internment camps to the front lines. Others, like Santa Cruz native Henry Arao\nand Watsonville native Yoshio Fujita left their families behind in the camps to take on some of the War's most difficult\nand dangerous assignments.\nArao, who left behind his father, four brothers and two sisters in the Poston, Ariz. internment camp shrugs off the irony.\n1\n\n�\"We figured we wanted to show them that we were just as much an American as anyone else.\"\nEtched into his memory is the sight of companion Sadao Minamari, who threw himself onto a grenade to save his squad\nfrom almost certain death. Arao was only about 100 feet away at the time. Minamari received a posthumous Medal of\nHonor, America's highest military decoration.\nArao doesn't like to talk about it, but his own Distinguished Service Cross and Purple Heart are locked away in a safedeposit box. He received the honor for dashing out into a clearing to save the life of his wounded squad leader during\nthe fateful rescue of the Lost Battalion.\nIn \"The Lost Battalions: Going for Broke in the Vosges\" by Soquel resident Franz Steidl, the Alamo Regiment (so named\nbecause of their San Antonio origin) had been cut off for six days in the fall of 1944 without food and water in the heavy\nforests of the Vosges Mountains of eastern France. The 442nd was sent into the rugged terrain to rescue the surrounded\nsoldiers. A barrage of machine gun fire and mortars from the German troops on the hilltop rained down on the men,\ntaking them out in droves.\n\"The worst was the tree bursts,\" said Goto, describing the explosions of mortars in the treetops that rained hot metal\nand splinters down on the men. \"You can hear it whistling before it comes down, but by then it's too late.\"\nThe dense growth of the Vosges forest was legendary, lending a Vietnam-like quality to the nightmarish experience.\nThe big difference from Vietnam, however, was the bitter cold. Soldiers slept in the snow, were pelted by rain and\nimpeded by fog so thick they could barely see their hands in front of their faces. Soldiers suffered from frostbite and\ntrench foot so severe they could barely walk; some had to have their boots cut off when they finally made their way\nback.\n\"The daytime sun doesn't penetrate there; it's dark as hell,\" said Goto. \"We said, 'Go for Broke,' but there was really no\nalternative. There was no place else to go.\"\nThe battalion was left with three times as many casualties as the number of men they rescued. More than 100 were\nkilled in the four day charge.\n\"We were charging uphill all the time, and they [the Germans] were just sitting on the hill waiting for us with machine\nguns,\" said Arao \"They had the hills loaded with mines. If you walked in the wrong spot, you'd get your leg blown off—\nand a lot of men did. We actually didn't have a chance.\"\nArao, who became leader of his squad of 17 when his own squad leader was hit by a mortar burst has also been silent\nabout the ordeal for 50 years. Finally, with great deal of urging, he's begun to talk.\n\"I went into that deal with 17 men and only four made it out,\" he said. \"It just seems like it wouldn't be right to talk too\nmuch about it. I lost a lot of good people, but I was lucky enough to come home.\"\nJapanese–American soldiers during WWII had to fight two battles: one against the Nazis, the other against\ndiscrimination. As then-President Harry S. Truman put it, they won both.\nYoshio Fujita served as a scout and a communications man during the war, stringing miles of wire along the rough\nterrain to connect the telephones the troops used. He doesn't talk much about the internment camp where his family\nstayed, sleeping in converted horse stalls. But when he thinks of the unfair treatment his fellow Japanese Americans\nconfronted, his eye tear with the rage of injustice.\nThe signs were everywhere, even in his hometown of Watsonville: \"No Japs Allowed.\" He finally decided he couldn't take\nanymore. One day, before he was shipped overseas, he went into a restaurant to confront the owner:\n\"How come you've got that sign up?\" he demanded of the first person he saw, a waiter.\n2\n\n�\"Can't you read? It means what it says,\" retorted the man.\n\"I can read,\" Fujita responded evenly. \"But I'm going to go over protect your hide, and you'd better take that damned\nthing down or you're not going to have any windows and doors left in this place. I'm going to tear them all down.\"\nFujita served in the 522nd Field Artillery unit of the 442nd, the unit that opened the gates at Dachau, freeing the Nazi\nconcentration camp victims. He never saw the camp, because he was one of the ones sent ahead, but he heard the\nstories. He confronted a well-dressed Jew on the streets before the rescue and asked him how he came to be free.\n\"I'm not like those stupid ones in the camp who opposed Hitler,\" said the man, as Fujita recalls it. \"I work with the Nazis,\nand I'm fat and happy and I smoke good cigars.\"\nFujita's eyes tear again with disbelief. \"I don't understand how he could live with himself,\" he said.\nThe 100th/442nd Regimental Combat Team was 4,500 strong, but members received 18,143 individual decorations for\nbravery, including nearly 10,000 Purple Hearts. Thirty-eight members of the team came from Santa Cruz County, of a\ntotal of nearly 100 Santa Cruz County residents who served during World War II.\nNearly 20 of them served in military intelligence, using their linguistic skills to penetrate enemy lines, break secret codes,\ntranslate documents and perform a variety of other tasks. Two were the brothers of retired Watsonville High School\nhistory teacher Mas Hashimoto, who served out the war in the internment camps.\nHashimoto said he has been trying to get local vets to tell their story for years. He doesn't mince words when he speaks\nof the treatment of the Nisei, the first-generation American-born children of Japanese parents, during the war. The\n442nd was used as cannon fodder, he believes, time and time again being sent into situations deemed too dangerous for\nwhite soldiers.\n\"They were expendable,\" said Hashimoto. \"At first no one wanted the Japanese Americans. Again and again, they got\nthe dirty jobs.\"\nHashimoto tells the story of Merle's Marauders, the Nisei troops who parachuted into the jungles of Burma. Fourteen\nNisi linguists were among them.\n\"They were the ones who not only captured Japanese documents and translated them, they endured unbelievable\ncasualties; of 2,000 guys, only about 200 survived. They went through hundreds and hundreds of miles of jungle and\nwent beyond what anyone could be expected to endure.\"\nHis brother, Tadashi Hashimoto on detached service to the Marine Corps, served in the Pacific Islands and Japan. Serving\nin the islands was especially difficult for Japanese–Americans, who were fired on by both sides: the Japanese, who saw\ntheir American uniforms, and the Americans, who saw their Japanese features.\n\"He was good at interrogating the prisoners, at getting them loosen up and talk about their commanders and regiment,\"\nsaid Hashimoto. \"He didn't wear a helmet, because he didn't want to shot by his Marine buddies. And at night he was to\nstay in the tent and come out only in daylight; otherwise, he'd be shot.\"\nTo DeBono, the men of the 442 have marked a unique place in history.\n\"These are not war stories; to me it's the story of the human spirit,\" she said, \"We're talking about matters of the heart\nhere.\"\n\n3\n\n�Sources\n\n\nThis article originally appeared in the Santa Cruz County Sentinel, April 27, 1999 (p. 1) and is copyrighted by\nthe Sentinel. It is used here with permission.\n\nThe content of this article is the responsibility of the individual author. It is the Library's intent to provide accurate local history\ninformation. However, it is not possible for the Library to completely verify the accuracy of individual articles obtained from a\nvariety of sources. If you believe that factual statements in a local history article are incorrect and can provide documentation,\nplease contact the Webmaster.\n\n4\n\n�"]]]]]]]]],["collection",{"collectionId":"8"},["elementSetContainer",["elementSet",{"elementSetId":"1"},["name","Dublin Core"],["description","The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/."],["elementContainer",["element",{"elementId":"50"},["name","Title"],["description","A name given to the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"123576"},["text","Santa Cruz History Articles"]]]],["element",{"elementId":"41"},["name","Description"],["description","An account of the resource"],["elementTextContainer",["elementText",{"elementTextId":"123577"},["text","Original articles by library staff and by local authors and material from historical books. 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