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Japanese imperial family pays respects to victims of WWII ship sunk by U.S. sub

Japanese imperial family pays respects to victims of WWII ship sunk by U.S. sub

Yahoo19 hours ago

June 5 (UPI) -- Japan's royal family wrapped up a two day visit to Okinawa Thursday, where they paid respects to the victims of a World War II-era Japanese evacuation ship that was torpedoed by a U.S. submarine.
Japanese Emperor Naruhito, Empress Masako and their daughter Princess Aiko prayed for the victims who were lost aboard the ship, according to the Japanese national daily news outlet the Mainichi. They called for peace during their visit.
The imperial family presented flowers and bowed deeply at a memorial site in Nama for the Tsushima battleship, on which at least 1,500 people, including hundreds of schoolchildren, were killed in the torpedo attack.
The family also visited a nearby memorial museum where they spoke to survivors and bereaved family members, and also witnessed several personal items that belonged to the schoolchildren who died.
One man, 85-year-old Masakatsu Takara, recounted the pain of losing nine of his family members, including his parents and siblings.
The Tsushima Maru was hit with a torpedo near southwestern Japan's Tokara Islands while traveling from Okinawa to Nagasaki during an August, 1944 government ordered evacuation.

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Veterans remain central to D-Day anniversary ceremonies
Veterans remain central to D-Day anniversary ceremonies

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Veterans remain central to D-Day anniversary ceremonies

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'I felt for those soldiers': Veteran, 100, recalls D-Day 81 years later
'I felt for those soldiers': Veteran, 100, recalls D-Day 81 years later

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'I felt for those soldiers': Veteran, 100, recalls D-Day 81 years later

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Uncle Frank's Dutch Family
Uncle Frank's Dutch Family

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timean hour ago

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Uncle Frank's Dutch Family

Michael Johnson reminds readers that the Dutch beautifully remember the Allies' sacrifice in World War II by adopting gravesites at the Netherlands American Cemetery (Letters, May 28). The wait list for doing so is longer than one year, he notes, 'as most have been adopted and are passed down from one generation to the next.' The tradition is personal for me. In June 2019, after attending the 75th-anniversary commemorations of D-Day in Normandy, France, I travelled to Margraten to visit my great uncle's grave. I was the first in my family to have seen Frank A. Johnson since he departed for Europe in the autumn of 1944. During my visit I was met by Frank's 'adoptive' family: a wonderful husband and wife, who, having never met me before, drove three hours to join me at the site. They both said that if it 'were not for men like your great uncle Frank, we would probably still be speaking German.'

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