|

POSTHUMOUS PROMOTION. A combo image made with photos provided by the
U.S. Army Pacific, shows from left to right, University of Hawai‘i ROTC
cadets Jenhatsu Chinen, Daniel Betsui, and Howard Urabe, top row, and
Hiroichi Tomita, Grover Nagaji, Robert Murata, and Akio Nishikawa,
bottom row. Seven Japanese American soldiers were promoted to officer
ranks in a solemn ceremony eight decades after they died fighting for
the U.S. during World War II despite having been branded "enemy aliens."
(U.S. Army Pacific via AP)

U.S. Army soldiers stand behind framed photos of former University of
Hawai‘i ROTC cadets during a moment of silence during a posthumous
commissioning ceremony at Ke’ehi Lagoon Memorial Park in Honolulu. (AP
Photo/Mengshin Lin)
From The Asian Reporter, V36, #3 (March 2, 2026), page 9.
Japanese American soldiers once branded "enemy
aliens" promoted posthumously
By Jennifer Sinco Kelleher
The Associated Press
HONOLULU — Seven Japanese American soldiers were promoted to officer
ranks in a solemn ceremony in January, eight decades after they died
fighting for the U.S. during World War II despite having been branded
"enemy aliens."
White flower lei-adorned framed photos of the men were displayed in a
Honolulu military memorial park and received salutes as their family
members watched from tents shielding them from rain that stopped as the
ceremony began.
The seven were students at the University of Hawai‘i and cadets in
the Reserve Officer Training Corps, on track to become Army officers,
when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. They initially
served in the Hawai‘i Territorial Guard, but soon after the attack the
U.S. barred most Japanese Americans from service and deemed them enemy
aliens.
The seven cadets instead worked with a civilian labor battalion known
as the "Varsity Victory Volunteers," which performed tasks such as
digging ditches and breaking rocks, until American leaders in early 1943
announced the formation of a segregated Japanese American regiment. The
seven were among those who joined the unit, known as the 442nd
Regimental Combat Team.
The combat team, along with the 100th battalion comprised of mostly
Japanese Americans from Hawai‘i, went on to become one of the most
decorated units in U.S. history. Some of its soldiers fought for the
Allies even as their relatives were detained in Japanese American
internment camps because they were considered a public danger.
"It is important for us to really kind of give back and recognize our
forefathers and these veterans that we stand on the shoulders of," said
1st Sgt. Nakoa Hoe of the 100th Battalion, 442nd Regiment, what the unit
is now known as in the Army Reserve. He noted the once-segregated unit
now includes a "multitude of cultures."
The seven "sacrificed so much at a challenging time when their
loyalty to their country was questioned and they even had family members
imprisoned," he added.
The seven men — Daniel Betsui, Jenhatsu Chinen, Robert Murata, Grover
Nagaji, Akio Nishikawa, Hiroichi Tomita, and Howard Urabe — died
fighting in Europe in 1944. All but Murata were killed during the
campaign to liberate Italy from Nazi Germany. Murata was killed by an
artillery shell in eastern France.
Murata’s nephew, Todd Murata, 65, grew up hearing about his uncle’s
sacrifice. "It’s an honor to be related to one of those people, those
men, who volunteered for service," he said. "After all these years,
people still remember them."
He was among the relatives who watched as the men were promoted to
2nd lieutenant, the rank they would have attained had they completed the
ROTC program.
Urabe’s niece, June Harada, said the ceremony helps heal some
injustice from the past. "Growing up, even though I wasn’t belittled for
my race, there wasn’t a lot of pride," she said. "It’s nice to have our
uncle recognized for this huge sacrifice that he made."
Even though Hawai‘i was not yet a state, the cadets were American
citizens because they were born in Hawai‘i after its annexation in 1898.
The ceremony capping efforts to honor the men comes amid growing
concern that President Donald Trump’s administration is whitewashing
American history ahead of the nation celebrating 250 years of its
independence. The administration has faced criticism for taking such
steps as the recent removal of an exhibit on slavery at Philadelphia’s
Independence National Historical Park.
The exhibit about nine people enslaved by George Washington was
ordered restored by a federal judge last month. The ruling was announced
on Presidents Day, the federal holiday honoring Washington’s legacy.
Last year, the Pentagon said internet pages honoring a Black Medal of
Honor winner and Japanese American service members were mistakenly taken
down. But it staunchly defended its overall campaign to strip out
content singling out the contributions by women and minority groups amid
Trump administration opposition to diversity, equity, and inclusion
initiatives.
Honoring the seven isn’t about DEI but recognizing them for their
merit and that "they served in the ultimate capacity of giving their
lives for the country," said Lt. Col. Jerrod Melander, who previously
led the University of Hawai‘i’s ROTC program as professor of military
science.
Melander said he launched the commissioning effort in 2023 during
former President Joe Biden’s administration and that the promotions were
approved last year during the Trump administration.
The university awarded the men posthumous degrees in 2012.
Read the current issue of The Asian Reporter in
its entirety!
Just visit <www.asianreporter.com/completepaper.htm>!
|