1/22. Almost 300k Asian Americans & Pacific Islanders have served in our nation's military. Of those, 36 are Medal of Honor recipients. Today for the #AAPIHM thread, we honor a soldier who was court-martialed for fighting, yet still received the MoH, Barney Hajiro.
2/22. Hajiro was born in Maui as the 2nd of 9 children, & worked as a stevedore in Oahu to help support his family. Like many Hawaiian men, he was drafted after Pearl Harbor; like almost all Hawaiians of Japanese descent, he served in the HI Territorial Guard, predecessor to
3/22. the Hawaii Army National Guard. Military governor Delos Emmons disarmed, then disbanded the Territorial Guard, but also lobbied the War Department to form a provisional infantry battalion so that Japanese Americans in Hawai'i could prove their loyalty.
4/22. Thus was born the 100th Infantry Battalion (Separate). Hajiro volunteered, but was not initially accepted. When the 442nd Regimental Combat Team stood up in Jan 1943, Hajiro enlisted & joined them at Camp Shelby, MS, for basic training. The 442nd, contrary to popular
5/22. belief, was not an accordiant unit. Like any other military unit, conflicts arose, specifically between soldiers from Hawai'i vs. Mainlanders. The Hawaiians saw Mainlanders as aloof & stingy, & derided them as "kotonks," the sound either a coconut or a Mainlander's head
6/22. makes when it hits the ground. Mainlanders viewed Hawaiians as crude, & mocked the pidgin English many spoke. Mainlanders called them "Buddhaheads," a play on the Japanese word for pig, buta. Intramural fights behind barracks broke out nightly after lights-out, with both
7/22. sides gambling on the outcome. Enter M Company's Private Hajiro, who, though small in size, made a name for himself as a "classy boxer," not a brawler. The fighting stopped abruptly midway through training, when Colonel Charles Pence, the 442nd's commander, organized
8/22. dances at Camps Jerome & Rowher, internment centers in Arkansas, between Japanese American women there & his soldiers. For the first time, Hawaiians saw with their own eyes what they'd refused to believe, that their own country would incarcerate its citizens. Hawaiians'
9/22. appreciation of kotonks skyrocketed, fighting replaced by a shared determination to fight to be recognized as Americans. In 1944, the 442nd deployed to Italy, where it linked up with the 100th Bn, which had been fighting for almost a year. On 5 June, the regiment secured
10/22. the outskirts of Rome, whose liberation the following day was eclipsed by events in France. Later that summer, Hajiro broke up a fight between an Italian man & a 442nd soldier. Hajiro was tried by summary court-martial & sent packing to I Company, 442sd.org/history/gfb-bu…
11/22. leaving the only Army home & buddies he'd known. Hajiro being Hajiro, his sense of humor & nose for finding beer helped make new friends, including Mainlanders Takeyasu Onaga & Ei'ichi Haita, who kept him out of further trouble. On 30 September, the 442nd landed in
12/22. Marseilles, assigned to the "T patchers" of the Texas National Guard's 36th Infantry Division. They fought north, up the Rhone valley. On 19 October, I Company & 2nd Battalion of the 442nd supported attacks on hills outside Bruyères simply named A, B, C, & D. Hajiro, who
13/22. despite his size wielded a 20-pound Browning Automatic Rifle, at one point led just 1 other soldier in an ambush of an 18-man German patrol, killing or capturing 16. The aforementioned Haita, Hajiro's assistant gunner, reportedly couldn't keep up with Hajiro's profligate
14/22. use of ammo. On 23 October, the 1/141 Infantry was cut off near Biffontaine. Germans repulsed repeated efforts to relieve the Texans. The 442nd drew the assignment to attack towards the 141st on 27 October, with its 100th & 3rd Battalions in the lead. The mountainous
15/22. terrain made both movement & communications difficult. Dense fog covered the valleys to a point where most soldiers had to grab another's webbing to not lose contact. Colder rain than anything the 442nd had seen in Italy, turned the ground into a encyclopedia.densho.org/Rescue_of_the_…
16/22. muddy quagmire. German 88mm shells exploded among the tall trees, "tree busts" that are more or less accurately depicted in the Bastogne episode in "Band of Brothers," causing heavy casualties. At 1430, I & K Companies were ordered to fix bayonets & charge up what would
17/22. later be named Suicide Hill, which lay between their regiment & the 1/141. German snipers & machine guns gutted both companies to a point where privates like Hajiro now led squads of 2-3 men, not the usual 12. After fighting up 100 meters of
18/22. cleared ground, Hajiro found himself about 10m ahead of I Company, drawing fire as he advanced. Alone, he singlehandedly killed 2 machine gun teams, then spotted & killed 2 German snipers. In the process, he was shot 4 times, in the face, shoulder, & arm. He refused
19/22. medical evacuation until every other more seriously wounded soldier went first. "I couldn’t run backward," he said later. "I had to run forward. That’s the job of a soldier." While recuperating back in the US, he received the Distinguished Service Cross.
20/22. After the war, England honored him with the Military Medal. He lived quietly with his wife & son on Oahu, until Senator Daniel Akaka of HI spearheaded a review of valor awards to Asian Americans during World War 2. In 2000, President Clinton authorized upgrading Hajiro's
21/22. DSC to the Medal of Honor, 1 of 4 awarded for the Vosges Mountains campaign alone. 21 other Japanese American recipients of the Distinguished Service Cross also saw their awards upgraded to the MoH. Hajiro's award begins at 20:54.
22/22. In 2004, the French government established him as a member of la Légion d'honneur, in the grade of Chevalier. Hajiro is buried at the National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific, aka "the Punchbowl," next to his wife, Esther. Go for broke, Barney. See you in Fiddlers Green.
Continuing the #AAPIHM thread here, with the perspective from another Medal of Honor received for actions at the opposite end of the Vosges battle. #GoForBroke
🧵 #OTD in 1942, FDR signed Executive Order 9066, which ordered the incarceration - under the guise of benign "relocation" - of over 120k Japanese Americans. And now, not for the 1st time, a presidential candidate thinks this is a swell idea to revisit. #DayOfRemembrance
2. The perceived disloyalty of Japanese Americans, coupled with good ol' xenophobia that's as American as apple pie or baseball, drove this policy. So did Lt. Gen. John DeWitt, commander of the US Army's Western Defense Command. Such a charmer, this DeWitt.
3. DeWitt saw fifth columns of Japanese Americans around every corner & under every rock. This was a natural extension of the FBI and other LE agencies investigating potential Japanese American agitation since the 1930s. Not because it existed, but because they weren't white.
🧵 I just saw "tipping" tread on this app, so might as well fire up some brain cells and get started on this. I promise, it won't take 30 minutes, but also, please bear with me because this is all coming off the top of my head. Why do we tip?
2. Let's start with a quick primer about what happens to restaurant tips, an indignant threaded reply to someone who opined that servers make too much money.
3. Tipping began in Europe as a gift from a feudal lord to a serf for a service rendered by the serf. It was a gesture, & not necessarily a generous one. The practice continued into the 19th century when those cocky upstarts, aka rich Americans, began to visit Europe.
I’m limited to a certain # of tweets per thread, but like my old squad leader used to say, I improvised, I adapted, & I overcame. Started this labor of love a few years back, but the 2023 thread of daily threads for #AAPIHM begins here on 1 May, with links to successive threads.
I started this in 2018 because I was pissed off. At the time, @USArmy had a vanilla tribute to AAPI soldiers on the main Army page, but not even a link to the 4-4-Deuce. I’m still pissed, went to the @USArmyMuseum last summer & the tiny 442 exhibit feels like an afterthought.
If we - soldiers who share #AAPI heritage - are as important to our service’s history as you claim, @USArmyMuseum & @USArmy, then please do better. I didn’t even let my son see that sad display. I was spoiled, we’d been to @USMCMuseum just before, where they honor everything &
1/19. Today in the #AAPIHM thread, the battle of the Vosges from another POV, & one of the bravest men I've ever had the honor to meet. George "Joe" Sakato was born in Colton, CA, 3rd of 7 children to a couple who owned a barber shop & bath house. When FDR signed Executive Order
2/19. 9066, the Sakatos were given a choice of being "interned," or moving to the Zone of the Interior (landlocked states). They chose the latter & moved to Glendale, AZ, where relatives already lived. By sheer luck, their new address north of the train line exempted them from
3/19. internment, but Japanese Americans living south of the tracks were not. Joe & one of his brothers sold produce to the War Relocation Authority, which ran the nearby camp in Poston. Joe was drafted in 1944 & wanted to join the ddr.densho.org/interviews/ddr…
1/21. I covered the Lee brothers in a previous #AAPIHM thread, but considering the significance of this weekend, they deserve a closer look. The Lee brothers, Chew-Een (Kurt) & Chew-Mon (Buck) were born in Sacramento to Chinese immigrant parents.
2/21. Kurt joined the US Marine Corps in 1944 when he turned 18, eager to join the war effort, but the Marines specifically, to counter white people's misconception of the "meek, obsequious, bland Asian," as he called that stereotype. Due to his ethnicity,
3/21. he was redirected to Japanese language school after boot camp. Undeterred, Sgt Lee applied for Officer Candidate School, & was commissioned in 1945. This gave Kurt the distinction of being not just the first non-white Marine officer, but its first Asian American as well.
It’s #Thanksgiving horror story time. 1997, I’m 1 of a group of friends renting a row house on Adam’s Mill Rd NW, on the east side of the National Zoo. My housemates had all left town or were with family, so my plan was the stranded bachelor dinner.
2. The rule was, I’ll cook the bird, y’all bring sides & booze. There were about 8 of us. Didn’t you come to this, @clvnzrdz? There was a guy from my unit, some GW grad students, & a few odds & sods from different restaurants.
3. I had just put my bird in the oven & was having a smoke break on the back steps. To my right, I watched my next door neighbor set up his fryer. I offered to help, but he declined, so 🤷🏻♂️. I kept smoking.