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Bridge to the Sun
The Secret Role of the Japanese Americans Who Fought in the Pacific in World War II
Bruce HendersonSeries: Bridge to the Sun(0)
About
One of the biggest untold stories of World War II, kept hidden by the U.S. government-and when most of the records were declassified in 1972, many of the files remained untouched in various archives, often incomplete or not easily located... a gripping true tale of courage, bravery and adventure by master storyteller, historian, and New York Times bestselling author Bruce Henderson-the extraordinary Japanese-American Nisei soldiers who fought in Burma, Iwo Jima, Okinawa, and who chose to risk their lives fighting their ancestral nation while their families back home in America faced suspicion, racial hatred, and under US Executive Order 9066, were forcibly incarcerated in detention camps.
Nisei: a first-generation American citizen born in the United States whose parents were immigrants from Japan.
The U.S. government, once officially at war with Japan, faced the difficult task of finding sufficient numbers of Japanese speakers to be trained as translators and interrogators in the Pacific theater, and turned to the Nisei-for help. Ultimately and despite their incarceration by the American government for "security reasons", more than 33,000 Nisei-internees, prisoners-eager to prove their loyalty to America, volunteered to serve in uniform. Highly valued as trained interrogators and expert translators, these American soldiers operated in elite intelligence teams alongside Army infantrymen and Marines on the frontlines of the Pacific, fighting for America from Guadalcanal to Burma, from Okinawa to Hiroshima's aftermath.
Nisei: a first-generation American citizen born in the United States whose parents were immigrants from Japan.
The U.S. government, once officially at war with Japan, faced the difficult task of finding sufficient numbers of Japanese speakers to be trained as translators and interrogators in the Pacific theater, and turned to the Nisei-for help. Ultimately and despite their incarceration by the American government for "security reasons", more than 33,000 Nisei-internees, prisoners-eager to prove their loyalty to America, volunteered to serve in uniform. Highly valued as trained interrogators and expert translators, these American soldiers operated in elite intelligence teams alongside Army infantrymen and Marines on the frontlines of the Pacific, fighting for America from Guadalcanal to Burma, from Okinawa to Hiroshima's aftermath.
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- SeriesBridge to the Sun