
Japan marks end of WWII as survivors remember wartime emperor's surrender speech 80 years ago
A national ceremony will begin at Tokyo's Budokan hall at noon, the same time then-Emperor Hirohito's 41/2-minute prerecorded speech began on Aug. 15, 1945, on national radio.
Hirohito's responsibility for the war remains controversial today, and Japan has struggled to come to terms with its wartime past, both at home and in the Asian countries it brutally invaded.
In 1995, then-Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama apologized over Japan's aggression in Asia. It was welcomed abroad but there has since been continual pushback against it by revisionists and those who deny responsibility.
Here's a look at the speech and the memories of some of the people who heard the announcement.
Japan's military saw violence, suicides and chaos right up until the official surrender
Even after the atomic attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there was dispute within the military government over if or how the war should be ended.
The day before the announcement, Hirohito, dressed in a formal military uniform, met with top government officials in a bunker at the Imperial Palace to approve Japan's surrender.
Staff members for NHK, the national broadcaster, were secretly called in, and Hirohito recorded the speech twice, finishing late that night. Palace officials hid the recordings to protect them from sabotage attempts by a group of army officers, who at one point seized the broadcast facility.
Despite the chaos, palace officials safely delivered the recordings to NHK for radio transmission at noon on Aug. 15, 1945. Up until the moment of the surrender announcement, there were suicides, coup attempts and fighting among army officers.
The action-filled drama of the days before Hirohito's radio address was made into a film, "Japan's Longest Day," as well as a graphic novel.
Hirohito's voice, which most Japanese were hearing for the first time because he was considered a living god, was not easy to understand because of poor sound quality and the arcane language he used. The message was clear, though: Japan had lost the war.
Fumiko Doi heard the emperor's address at home in Nagasaki just 6 days after surviving the atomic bombing
She remembers that her neighbors gathered at her home to listen to a radio placed on top of a cabinet. She did not understand what exactly was said, but later learned it was the announcement of Japan's surrender.
It was not a surprise, because she had heard her mother say that Japan would lose.
"I only wish the emperor had issued an order to end the war sooner," Doi says.
The Nagasaki bombing and an attack on Hiroshima three days earlier together killed more than 210,000 people and left many survivors with radiation-induced illnesses.
On Aug. 9, 1945, at 11:02 a.m., Doi was on a train 5 kilometers (3 miles) away from the location a U.S. B-29 dropped the atomic bomb. Her mother and two of her three brothers died of cancer, and two sisters have struggled with their health.
Relief and tears as the emperor's speech reached a hospital filled with wounded
Reiko Muto, who survived the massive Tokyo firebombing just five months earlier as a 17-year-old nursing student, was at her hospital on Aug. 15. Everyone gathered in an auditorium for "an important broadcast."
People cried when the emperor's muffled voice came on the radio.
"The first thing that came to my mind was that now I could leave the lights on at night," Muto said. "I was so relieved that the war was over."
The March 10, 1945, U.S. firebombing of Tokyo killed more than 100,000 people. Truckloads of people with serious burns cried in pain and begged for water, but because of a shortage of medical supplies, the best she could do was to comfort them.
But the end of the war didn't immediately end the hardship. Her hospital and nursing school were occupied by the allied powers, though she managed to graduate two years later and pursued a career in pediatric nursing.
"What we went through should never be repeated," she says.
For Tamiko Sora, a Hiroshima survivor, the surrender speech is a bittersweet memory
Sora, her two sisters and their parents barely survived the atomic bombing on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945, when the blast destroyed her home just 1.4 kilometers (0.9 mile) from the hypocenter, and Sora's face was burned. Her grandmother suffered severe burns, and her uncle and aunt were never found.
While taking shelter at a relatives' home, her parents listened to the radio broadcast, but sound quality was particularly bad in Hiroshima because the atomic bombing destroyed key infrastructure.
Her grandmother, who died later that day, sounded disappointed about the announcement, Sora said.
Her grandmother's generation venerated the emperor, and his acknowledgment of Japan's defeat must have discouraged her far more than the rest of the family imagined, Sora said.
Despite the sadness of her grandmother's death, the surrender speech gave Sora peace of mind.
"War brings horror and intimidation even to little children," she said.
The emperor and prime minister speak on Aug. 15
Hirohito's son and grandson have repeatedly expressed deep remorse over the war, but prime ministers since 113 have not apologized to Asian victims of Japan's aggression amid a government lean toward revisionism.
Hirohito's grandson, current Emperor Naruhito, has repeatedly stressed the importance of telling the war's tragic history to younger generations. He has traveled to Iwo Jima, Okinawa and Hiroshima, and is expected to visit Nagasaki with his daughter, Princess Aiko, in September.
Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba, who has signaled a more neutral view of Japan's wartime history, has said he is determined to keep passing on the tragedy of the war.
But his leadership comes as emboldened ultra-conservatives in his party try to force him out over a July election loss.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Mainichi
an hour ago
- The Mainichi
LDP to gauge lawmakers' support on whether PM Ishiba should be replaced
TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Japan's ruling party plans to gauge the support of its members in writing on whether it should hold an earlier than scheduled leadership race, a party lawmaker said Tuesday, as incumbent Shigeru Ishiba faces calls to step down following poor showings in recent elections. The Liberal Democratic Party's election panel met to discuss the details of how a presidential election could be called in the middle of an incumbent's term. It has never held such a race based on existing party rules, but Ishiba's defiance to stay on as Japanese leader has led the party to consider the option. "It's an issue that should be dealt with speedily", Ichiro Aizawa, who heads the election panel, told reporters after the meeting. A party leadership election can be held if the move is supported by the majority, or 172, of lawmakers and local chapter executives, according to the party's rules. Ishiba, who became LDP president and prime minister last year, can also run. The LDP decided in early August that its election panel could go ahead with the process of checking whether its members support the idea of holding an earlier-than-scheduled presidential race. Ishiba, whose current three-year term ends in September 2027, has been seeking to deflect mounting pressure from fellow LDP lawmakers and local chapters demanding that he resign, after the ruling coalition lost its majority in the House of Councillors in the July 20 election. With the coalition already a minority in the more powerful House of Representatives, this means that support from the opposition camp is required to pass any bills and budgets. The timing for the LDP to start soliciting views on a presidential election will hinge on its ongoing internal probe into why it suffered its worst upper house election loss in years. Secretary General Hiroshi Moriyama, the LDP's No. 2, has said the review will be completed by the end of August.

an hour ago
Japan to Participate in Security Guarantees for Ukraine
News from Japan Politics Aug 19, 2025 15:32 (JST) Tokyo, Aug. 19 (Jiji Press)--Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said Tuesday that the country will be involved in providing Ukraine with security guarantees to deter Russia from launching another invasion. "We'll thoroughly discuss what our nation can and should do, including in terms of laws and capabilities, and fulfil our appropriate role," Ishiba told reporters at the prime minister's office in Tokyo. Ishiba stressed the need for an early ceasefire in Ukraine. "Achieving peace will take time," he said, adding, "We must put an end to the slaughtering of innocent people through an early ceasefire." His statements came after NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said Monday that 30 countries, including Japan, will be involved in offering security guarantees for Ukraine. END [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press


The Mainichi
2 hours ago
- The Mainichi
Residents accused of 'spying' for US military killed on Okinawa island even after WWII's end
KUMEJIMA, Okinawa -- Even after the radio broadcast of then Emperor Hirohito (posthumously known as Emperor Showa) announcing the end of World War II in Japan in the summer of 1945, tragedies continued on Kume Island, about 100 kilometers west of Okinawa's main island. On Aug. 18, 1945, three days after the nationwide broadcast, a man was killed along with his wife and child after he called for residents to surrender. On Aug. 20, a family of seven headed by a Korean man were brutally murdered. Five of them were children including an infant. The assailants were a Japanese military unit led by Tadashi Kayama. In Okinawa, where a ground battle between Japanese and U.S. forces took place, organizational combat had come to an end in late June following the suicide of a Japanese military commander. The Kayama unit, however, did not surrender to the U.S. military, and around 30 soldiers hid themselves on Mount Uegusuku. After U.S. troops landed on Kume Island on June 26, the Kayama unit killed residents one after the other who had connections with the U.S. military. A man who brought a document believed to be a surrender notice to the unit at the request of U.S. forces was executed by the unit leader. A total of nine locals -- including at least one resident who was temporarily captured by the U.S. military and their family members -- were labeled as "spies" and killed. "The Japanese military was even scarier," one resident recounted, while another said, "If you talked to Americans, it became such a big deal. They (the Japanese military) would instantly accuse you of spying," according to testimonies recorded in the town history of Kumejima. The Kayama unit, which locals feared as "mountain troops," surrendered on Sept. 7. By that time, the lives of 20 local residents had been claimed.