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Snapp Shots: WWII Japanese U.S. Vet’s Brush With Death 70 Years Ago

On the morning of Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, 18-year-old Lawson Sakai was listening to a pro football game on the radio in the family kitchen.

Suddenly, a breathless announcer interrupted the broadcast and said, “The Japanese have attacked the American base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii!” The next morning, Lawson and four of his friends marched down to the Army recruiting office to sign up.

The friends were accepted, but he was turned away. Why? Because they were white and he was Japanese-American. He asked for an explanation and discovered that his draft classification had been changed from 1-A to 4-C, “enemy alien,” even though he was born and raised in America.

There was worse to come. A few weeks later, all the Japanese-Americans on the West Coast were arrested and sent to detention camps that were stuck out in the middle of nowhere, where it was broiling hot in summer, freezing cold in winter and dirty, dusty and depressing all year-round.

The camps were surrounded by barbed wire, and there were guards with machine guns on the watchtowers, ready to shoot anyone who tried to escape. And for what? There was not even one incident of Japanese-American espionage or sabotage throughout the war. The whole thing was racist, mean-spirited and cruel.

So what was Lawson’s response? He volunteered again to fight for the country that was doing this to him and his family. Talk about returning good for evil! And he was turned down again. So he tried the Navy. They said “no,” too.

Finally, in 1943, the Army was so desperate for manpower that it was willing to take anyone, even Japanese Americans. (But in a segregated unit, of course.) Thousands of Japanese-American boys volunteered, including future U.S. Sen. Daniel Inouye, and the 442nd Regimental Combat Team was formed.

Were they good soldiers? No. They were the best soldiers America has ever had, and the numbers bear that out. They were awarded more medals, man for man, than any other military unit in American history.

“They were superb!” said Gen. George Marshall, the Army’s chief of staff. “They showed rare courage and tremendous fighting spirit. Everybody wanted them.” They were called the “Purple Heart Battalion” because they suffered so many casualties — 9,486 in all.

Lawson was awarded four of those Purple Hearts — technically, a Purple Heart with three Oak Leaf Clusters — and he would have been awarded a fifth if he hadn’t refused because he didn’t think his wound was serious enough. (He also received a Bronze Star and the Combat Infantryman’s Badge.) On Oct. 27, 1944 — 70 years ago Monday — he was on patrol in the Vosges Mountains when he suddenly found himself face-to-face with a German soldier.

They both fired their rifles simultaneously. The German missed. Lawson did not. Hours later, after the battle, he looked at the calendar and realized that it was his 21st birthday. More importantly, it was also the day he didn’t die.

Remember the end of “Saving Private Ryan,” when the dying Capt. Miller says to Private Ryan, “Earn this?” Lawson Sakai has spent the last 70 years earning the sacrifice of his brothers-in-arms who never came back. He has been an exemplary husband, father, businessman, veteran and, speaking personally, friend.

Happy 91st birthday, Lawson. And happy anniversary, too.

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