Hiroo Onoda, the Japanese Soldier Who Gave Up the “Fight”…in 1974

Busied himself with hacking local peasants to death until found and formally ordered to stand down

Gotta give it to Imperial Japan, they knew how to program them

Lieutenant Hiroo Onoda is the most famous of the so-called Japanese holdouts, a collection of Imperial Army stragglers who continued to hide out in the South Pacific for several years after World War II had ended.

An intelligence officer, Onoda had been on Lubang since 1944, a few months before the Americans invaded and retook the Philippines. The last instructions he had received from his immediate superior ordered him to retreat to the interior of the island – which was small and in truth of minimal importance – and harass the Allied occupying forces until the Imperial Japanese Army eventually returned. “You are absolutely forbidden to die by your own hand”, he was told. “It may take three years, it may take five, but whatever happens, we’ll come back for you. Until then, so long as you have one soldier, you are to continue to lead him”.

Onoda continued his campaign as a Japanese holdout, initially living in the mountains with three fellow soldiers (Private Yūichi Akatsu, Corporal Shōichi Shimada and Private First Class Kinshichi Kozuka). During his stay, Onoda and his companions carried out guerrilla activities and engaged in several shootouts with the police.

Had to be given formal orders to stop attacking peasants tending to rice fields…

The first time they saw a leaflet announcing that Japan had surrendered was in October 1945; another cell had killed a cow and found a leaflet left behind by islanders which read: “The war ended on August 15. Come down from the mountain!”. However, they mistrusted the leaflet. They concluded that the leaflet was Allied propaganda, and also believed that they would not have been fired on if the war had indeed been over.

Toward the end of 1945, leaflets were dropped by air with a surrender order printed on them from General Tomoyuki Yamashita of the Fourteenth Area Army. They had been in hiding for over a year, and this leaflet was the only evidence they had the war was over. Onoda’s group looked very closely at the leaflet to determine whether it was genuine, and decided it was not.

…still got a pardon on the account of how mind-bogglingly scandalous that was.

One of the four, Yuichi Akatsu walked away from the others in September 1949 and surrendered to Filipino forces in 1950 after six months on his own. This seemed like a security problem to the others and they became even more careful. In 1952 letters and family pictures were dropped from aircraft urging them to surrender, but the three soldiers concluded that this was a trick.

Shimada was shot in the leg during a shoot-out with local fishermen in June 1953, after which Onoda nursed him back to health. On May 7, 1954, Shimada was killed by a shot fired by a search party looking for the men. Kozuka was killed by two shots fired by local police on October 19, 1972, when he and Onoda, as part of their guerrilla activities, were burning rice that had been collected by farmers. Onoda was now alone.

On February 20, 1974, Onoda met a Japanese man, Norio Suzuki, who was traveling around the world, looking for “Lieutenant Onoda, a panda, and the Abominable Snowman, in that order”. Suzuki found Onoda after four days of searching. Onoda described this moment in a 2010 interview: “This hippie boy Suzuki came to the island to listen to the feelings of a Japanese soldier. Suzuki asked me why I would not come out…”. Onoda and Suzuki became friends, but Onoda still refused to surrender, saying that he was waiting for orders from a superior officer.

Suzuki returned to Japan with photographs of himself and Onoda as proof of their encounter, and the Japanese government located Onoda’s commanding officer, Major Yoshimi Taniguchi, who had since become a bookseller. He flew to Lubang where on March 9, 1974, he finally met with Onoda and fulfilled the promise made in 1944, “Whatever happens, we’ll come back for you,” by issuing him the following orders:

1. In accordance with the Imperial command, the Fourteenth Area Army has ceased all combat activity.
2. In accordance with military Headquarters Command No. A-2003, the Special Squadron of Staff’s Headquarters is relieved of all military duties.
3. Units and individuals under the command of Special Squadron are to cease military activities and operations immediately and place themselves under the command of the nearest superior officer. When no officer can be found, they are to communicate with the American or Philippine forces and follow their directives.
— Hiroo Onoda, Onoda 1999, pp. 13–14

Onoda was thus properly relieved of duty, and he surrendered. He turned over his sword, his functioning Arisaka Type 99 rifle, 500 rounds of ammunition and several hand grenades, as well as the dagger his mother had given him in 1944 to kill himself with if he was captured. Though he had killed people and engaged in shootouts with the police, the circumstances (namely, that he believed that the war was still ongoing) were taken into consideration, and Onoda received a pardon from President Ferdinand Marcos.

Onoda was so popular following his return to Japan that some Japanese urged him to run for the Diet (Japan’s bicameral legislature). He also released a ghostwritten autobiography, No Surrender: My Thirty-Year War, shortly after his return, detailing his life as a guerrilla fighter in a war that was long over.

He was reportedly unhappy being the subject of so much attention and troubled by what he saw as the withering of traditional Japanese values. In April 1975, he followed the example of his elder brother Tadao and left Japan for Brazil, where he raised cattle. He married in 1976 and assumed a leading role in Colônia Jamic (Jamic Colony), the Japanese community in Terenos, Mato Grosso do Sul, Brazil.

Be a not very smart robot, hack peasants to death, become a big “moral authority”

After reading about a Japanese teenager who had murdered his parents in 1980, Onoda returned to Japan in 1984 and established the Onoda Shizen Juku (“Onoda Nature School”) educational camp for young people, held at various locations in Japan. Onoda died of heart failure on 16 January 2014, at St. Luke’s International Hospital in Tokyo, due to complications from pneumonia. Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga commented on his death: “I vividly remember that I was reassured of the end of the war when Mr Onoda returned to Japan” and also praised his will to survive.

Source: Rare Historical Photos

16 Comments
  1. […] Hiroo Onoda, the Japanese Soldier Who Gave Up the “Fight”…in 1974 by Rare Historical Photos on December 28, 2019 at 12:50 […]

  2. Undecider says

    “Karoshi” – Death by overtime. This is one Japanese who didn’t die from working nearly three decades of overtime.

  3. Genghis Gobi says

    How is he a war criminal? He stuck faithfully to the orders he was given: “no matter what, you are too hold out until we come back for you”. This required incredible moral courage and tenacity.

    There was another Korean-Japanese soldier who hung on for even longer, whose name I don’t recall right now, but who doesn’t qualify because he admitted that he knew the war was over but didn’t want to have to deal with a postwar Japan.

  4. SFC Steven M Barry USA RET says

    Who is the bed-wetting jerk-off who wrote the photo captions? In Special Forces during the mid-1970s we held Onoda in high regard.

    1. Marko Marjanović says

      And we all know what beacons of good judgment special forces are.

      1. Garry Compton says

        That was a great – rebuttal , even though I have been there – Nam 70 and 71. lol

  5. Melville Pouwels says

    bet his children are sooo proud of him

    1. FilastinHuratan says

      Shouldn’t they be?

    2. Genghis Gobi says

      Of course they should.

  6. mwk says

    amazing Japanese loyalty. for westerners to call him a rat is almost like the typical western hypocrisy when thinking about the atrocity of nuclear bombings on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

    1. Genghis Gobi says

      And the fire bombings of 65 Japanese cities apart from Tokyo, which was again bombed after Nagasaki and when the Japanese had already decided to surrender.

  7. Canosin says

    it may sound odd …. but these guys knew what honor, loyalty, staunchness, faithfulness meant….. of course in the context of the Japanese code of conduct and allegiance to the Tenno…..somehow admirable but cpl. foreign to westerners

    1. Marko Marjanović says

      Devotion to a criminal enterprise is quaint but it’s not a virtue. He wasn’t even attacking US soldiers but Filipino villagers tending to their land.

      A good cautionary tale in what happens when you’re personally “honorable” but let a state do your thinking for you.

      1. FilastinHuratan says

        Devotion to a criminal enterprise is quaint but it’s not a virtue.

        Tell that to U.S. “soldiers” and to those cowardly, racist bog rats posing as “soldiers” for Occupied Palestine.

      2. Brutus says

        Guess fire bombing cities, napalming villages, and even nuking cities is not attacking civilians?

        Besides, Japan was not the aggressor.

        Brutus

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