VOA标准英语2009年-World War II 'Lost Battalion' Veterans Reu(在线收听) |
By Greg Flakus In late October, 1944 the First Battalion of the U.S. 141st Infantry Regiment, comprised mostly of men from the Texas National Guard, broke through German lines in northeastern France and then found themselves cut off and surrounded by the enemy. They became known as "The Lost Battalion" and would have all died had it not been for the heroic rescue operation carried out by the mostly Japanese-American soldiers of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team. Around 40 aging veterans from both units came together in Houston on November first for what may be the last time. "You represent such a special group of that very special generation and the courage, the valor, the heroism," said Admiral Mullen. "I have been blown up three or four times, three times, and I have been shot at I do not know how many times and then I had diphtheria, measles and pneumonia," said George Sakato. The mostly Japanese-American 442nd took heavy casualties and Sakato says he lost one of his best friends when the Germans counterattacked. "I crawled over and he died in my arms and I just lost it [became angry] and I figured I would get the s.o.b [son of a bitch] who shot him or die trying," he said. "If it had not been for them, I would not be here today," said Jack Wilson. Wilson says the dedication of the Japanese American soldiers was all the more remarkable given the fact that they had left behind their families in internment camps where the U.S. government had placed them out of fear that they might help Japan. "They put them in these internment camps," he said. "They lost their homes, a lot of them did. They lost everything they had but the clothes on their back." Wilson says these men demonstrated their loyalty and their effectiveness as fighters. "They had something to prove and they proved it," said Wilson. "They proved they were good Americans." In 1988, the U.S. Congress passed a bill that provided reparations to Japanese Americans interned during the war. There is also a memorial dedicated to the patriotism and courage of the Japanse-American soldiers in Washington, DC. "We had to do it," said Don Seki. "Somebody had to do it, so we went all out. That is our motto - shoot the works, go for broke." Seki says that was a spirit inculcated in Japanese-American children by their parents. "The way we were brought up, you cannot let your country down or your family down," he said. Seki's 442nd Regimental Combat Team became the most decorated unit in US military history for its size and length of service. While their bodies have now become frail with age, they maintain that patriotic spirit and they never forget the men who were unable to come home. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2009/11/87385.html |