December 7, 1941, was a big day for Mitsuo Fuchida, a day he
had long prepared for and looked forward to. For, you see, Fuchida was the lead
pilot of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. And his life story is quite
amazing.
I have heard Fuchida’s story from time to time through the
years, maybe first in 1954 when his article “I Led the Attack on Pearl Harbor”
appeared in the Reader’s Digest,
which I often read when I was in high school.
But I have just finished reading for the first time a book
that impressively tells of his preparation for 12/7/41, his battles over the
next 3½ years, and then the remarkable story of his becoming a Christian and an
evangelist after the war. The book is titled God’s Samurai: Lead Pilot at
Pearl Harbor (1990).
Gordon W. Prange,
professor of history at the University of Maryland, is the primary author of God’s Samurai, but it was not published
until ten years after his death in 1980. Prange’s manuscript, completed by two
colleagues, was based mostly on his extensive interviews of Fuchida (b. 1902)
in the mid-1960s. Prange and Fuchida first met in the late 1940s and had
regular contact with each other until Fuchida’s death in 1976.
Lieutenant Fuchida
was thrilled when he was chosen to lead the attack on Pearl Harbor. “No moral
qualms assailed him,” according to Prange (p.26). So it was that on the morning
of December 7, 1941, Fuchida led the attack, triumphantly shouting over the
radio to the other fighter planes following him as they neared Pearl Harbor,
“Tora! Tora! Tora!” (Tora, the
Japanese word for tiger, was the code
word indicating that complete surprise had been achieved.)*
Prange remarks that
after the attack Fuchida “was filled with pride of his men and of himself, and
from his standpoint he had every right to be. The airmen had succeeded beyond
all expectation” (p. 37).
The next 150 pages
narrate events in the Pacific War, detailing the initial Japanese successes, the
decisive battle of Midway that changed the course of the war, and then the
dropping of the atomic bombs and the subsequent end of the war. It was rather
miraculous that Fuchida came through all that alive.
A little over three
years later, in October 1948, Fuchida was handed a Christian tract near the
famous Hachiko (a dog) statue in Tokyo. Nearly a year later he decided to
become a Christian, and then contacted the man whose name and address was on
the tract. That man was Timothy Pietsch, a missionary.
I was quite
interested to see Prange’s reference to Pietsch, for his wife Helen was the
sister of Edwin Dozier. And Dr. Dozier was the chancellor of Seinan Gakuin in
Japan when I became a faculty member of the university there in 1968. (Although
I never met Pietsch, I have met his wife, Helen, and their son. And their
grandson, Billy Pietsch, is one of my Facebook friends.)
After becoming a
Christian, Fuchida soon began giving his testimony and later sailed with
Timothy Pietsch to the United States where he spent several months, speaking in
numerous churches and even being interviewed by Billy Graham. That interview
was telecast on Graham’s “Hour of Decision” on December 7, 1952.
The story of Mitsuo
Fuchida is a fascinating one, and Christians can easily understand why he has
been called God’s Samurai.
_________
_________
This is fascinating, Leroy. Almost certainly I've read about Mitsuo Fuchida, but for the life of me I can't remember. I'll have to read the book.
ReplyDeleteThanks for writing, Anton.
DeleteThe book is rather slow to read and has some flaws, but I found it fascinating.
I am uninspired by this murderers story.
ReplyDeleteWell, Billy Graham and many (conservative) Christians have found it very inspiring, mainly because they believe that people can be forgiven by God's grace and changed by Jesus Christ.
DeleteThanks for the story, Leroy. Certainly a difficult story for those who lived this awful event. But this is a powerful story of how God's redeeming love is at work in the world, even among murderers. Thank goodness we have ALL been recipients of God's grace and forgiveness.
ReplyDeleteDavid, thanks for writing -- and I certainly agree with your comments.
ReplyDeleteThinking Friend Melvin Bradshaw, who was a missionary colleague of mine in Japan for a number of years, gave me permission to post the following e-mail comments received a few minutes ago:
ReplyDelete"I wrote a blog about Fuchida which I called 'A Preacher, a Pilot and a POW.' It was based on Fuchida's one hour and a half hour testimony which I heard him give and my personal experience with him at Seinan Jo Gakuin. You can find it on my blog for June 22, 2010.
"He was indeed a remarkable person with a powerful testimony."
The link to Melvin's blog article, which is more detailed than what I wrote, is http://peanutcountrypreacher.wordpress.com/2010/06/22/a-preacher-a-pilot-and-a-pow/. I much appreciate Melvin sharing this with me and with readers of this blog.
Appreciated reading your blog. It is difficult for our hardened hearts to get past the horriblness of such events. It is good to be reminded of the power of God's grace.
ReplyDelete