This is
the incredible story of the lead pilot of 7 December 1941, raid on Pearl
Harbor. Mitsuo Fuchida was the one who shouted the war cry, "Tora, Tora,
Tora!"
Fuchida
fought the United States throughout WWII and was intimately involved in the
planning and leadership of the Japanese war effort as flight commander and
later as a senior operations officer. After the war, Fuchida was a defeated
warrior in occupied Japan, farming to meet the needs of his family. In 1950,
Fuchida miraculously came to know Jesus Christ as Saviour through a tract
handed to him while exiting a train in Tokyo. The tract was entitled, "I
Was a Prisoner of Japan," written by Jacob DeShazer who was one of the
famous Doolittle Raiders. DeShazer trusted Christ as his Saviour while held
captive by Japan for 40 months. DeShazer went to Japan in 1948 as a missionary
and preached to the nation who held him captive. Fuchida faithfully served
Jesus Christ as an evangelist until his death in 1976. "From Pearl Harbor
to Calvary" is Fuchida's testimony of salvation.
I must
admit I was more excited than usual as I awoke that morning at 3:00 a.m.,
Hawaii time, four days past my thirty-ninth birthday. Our six aircraft carriers
were positioned 230 miles north of Oahu Island. As general commander of the air
squadron, I made last-minute checks on the intelligence information reports in
the operations room before going to warm up my single-engine, three-seater
"97-type" plane used for level bombing and torpedo flying.
The
sunrise in the east was magnificent above the white clouds as I led 360 planes
towards Hawaii at an altitude of 3,000 meters. I knew my objective: to surprise
and cripple the American naval force in the Pacific. But I fretted about being
thwarted should some of the U.S. battleships not be there. I gave no thought of
the possibility of this attack breaking open a mortal confrontation with the
United States. I was only concerned about making a military success.
As we
neared the Hawaiian Islands that bright Sunday morning, I made a preliminary
check of the harbor, nearby Hickam Field and the other installations
surrounding Honolulu. Viewing the entire American Pacific Fleet peacefully at
anchor in the inlet below, I smiled as I reached for the mike and ordered,
"All squadrons, plunge in to attack!" The time was 0749L.
Like a
hurricane out of nowhere, my torpedo planes, dive bombers and fighters struck
suddenly with indescribable fury. As smoke began to billow and the proud
battleships, one by one, started tilting, my heart was almost ablaze with joy.
During the next three hours, I directly commanded the fifty level bombers as
they pelted not only Pearl Harbor, but the airfields, barracks and dry docks
nearby. Then I circled at a higher altitude to accurately assess the damage and
report it to my superiors.
Of the
eight battleships in the harbor, five were mauled into total inactivity for the
time being. The Arizona was scrapped for good; the Oklahoma, California and
West Virginia were sunk. The Nevada was beached in a sinking condition; only
the Pennsylvania, Maryland and Tennessee were able to be repaired. Of the
eight, the California, West Virginia and Nevada were salvaged much later, but
the Oklahoma, after being raised, was resunk as worthless. Other smaller ships
were damaged, but the sting of 3,077 U.S. Navy personnel killed or missing and
876 wounded, plus 226 Army killed and 396 wounded, was something which could
never be repaired.
It was
the most thrilling exploit of my career. Ever since I had heard of my country's
winning the Russo-Japanese War in 1905, I had dreamed of becoming an admiral
like Admiral Togo, our commander-in-chief in the decisive Battle of the Japan
Sea.
Because
my father was a primary school principal and a very patriotic nationalist, I
was able to enroll in the Naval Academy when I was eighteen. Upon graduation
three years later, I joined the Japanese Naval Air Force, and served mostly as
an aircraft carrier pilot for the next fifteen years. So when the time came to
choose the chief commander for the Pearl Harbor mission, I had logged over
10,000 hours, making me the most experienced pilot in the Japanese Navy.
During
the next four years, I was determined to improve upon my Pearl Harbor feat. I
saw action in the Solomon Islands, Java, the Indian Ocean; just before the
Battle of Midway on 4 June 1942, I came down with an attack of appendicitis and
was unable to fly. Lying in my bed, I grimaced at the sounds of the firing all
about me. By the end of that day, we had suffered our first major defeat,
losing ten warships altogether.
From
that time on, things got worse. I did not want to surrender. I would rather
have fought to the last man. However, when the Emperor announced that we would
surrender, I acquiesced.
I was in
Hiroshima the day before the atom bomb was dropped, attending a week long
military conference with the Army. Fortunately, I received a long distance call
from my Navy Headquarters, asking me to return to Tokyo.
With the
end of the war, my military career was over, since all Japanese forces were
disbanded. I returned to my home village near Osaka and began farming, but it
was a discouraging life. I became more and more unhappy, especially when the
war crime trials opened in Tokyo. Though I was never accused, Gen. Douglas
MacArthur summoned me to testify on several occasions.
As I got
off the train one day in Tokyo's Shibuya Station, I saw an American
distributing literature. When I passed him, he handed me a pamphlet entitled I Was a Prisoner of Japan (published by
Bible Literature International, known then as the Bible Meditation League).
Involved right then with the trials on atrocities committed against war
prisoners, I took it.
What I
read was the fascinating episode which eventually changed my life. On that
Sunday while I was in the air over Pearl Harbor, an American soldier named Jake
DeShazer had been on KP duty in an Army camp in California. When the radio
announced the sneak demolishing of Pearl Harbor, he hurled a potato at the wall
and shouted, "Jap, just wait and see what we'll do to you!"
One
month later he volunteered for a secret mission with the Jimmy Doolittle
Squadron -- a surprise raid on Tokyo from the carrier Hornet. On 18 April 1942,
DeShazer was one of the bombardiers, and was filled with elation at getting his
revenge. After the bombing raid, they flew on towards China, but ran out of
fuel and were forced to parachute into Japanese-held territory. The next
morning, DeShazer found himself a prisoner of Japan.
During
the next forty long months in confinement, DeShazer was cruelly treated. He
recalls that his violent hatred for the maltreating Japanese guards almost
drove him insane at one point. But after twenty-five months there in Nanking,
China, the U.S. prisoners were given a Bible to read. DeShazer, not being an
officer, had to let the others use it first. Finally, it came his turn -- for
three weeks. There in the Japanese POW camp, he read and read and eventually
came to understand that the book was more than an historical classic. Its
message became relevant to him right there in his cell.
The
dynamic power of Christ which Jake DeShazer accepted into his life changed his
entire attitude toward his captors. His hatred turned to love and concern, and
he resolved that should his country win the war and he be liberated, he would
someday return to Japan to introduce others to this life-changing book.
DeShazer
did just that. After some training
at Seattle Pacific College, he returned to Japan as a missionary. And his
story, printed in pamphlet form, was something I could not explain.
Neither
could I forget it. The peaceful motivation I had read about was exactly what I
was seeking. Since the American had found it in the Bible, I decided to
purchase one myself, despite my traditionally Buddhist heritage.
In the
ensuing weeks, I read this book eagerly. I came to the climactic drama -- the
Crucifixion. I read in Luke 23:34 the prayer of Jesus Christ at His death:
"Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do." I was
impressed that I was certainly one of those for whom He had prayed. The many
men I had killed had been slaughtered in the name of patriotism, for I did not
understand the love which Christ wishes to implant within every heart.
Right at
that moment, I seemed to meet Jesus for the first time. I understood the
meaning of His death as a substitute for my wickedness, and so in prayer, I
requested Him to forgive my sins and change me from a bitter, disillusioned
ex-pilot into a well-balanced Christian with purpose in living.
That
date, 14 April 1950 -- became the second "Day to Remember" of my
life. On that day, I became a new person. My complete view on life was changed
by the intervention of the Christ I had always hated and ignored before. Soon
other friends beyond my close family learned of my decision to be a follower of
Christ, and they could hardly understand it.
Big
headlines appeared in the papers: "Pearl Harbor Hero Converts to
Christianity." Old war buddies came to visit me, trying to persuade me to
discard "this crazy idea." Others accused me of being an opportunist,
embracing Christianity only for how it might impress our American victors.
But time
has proven them wrong. As an evangelist, I have traveled across Japan and the
Orient introducing others to the One Who changed my life. I believe with all my
heart that those who will direct Japan -- and all other nations -- in the
decades to come must not ignore the message of Jesus Christ. Youth must realize
that He is the only hope for this troubled world.
Though
my country has the highest literacy rate in the world, education has not
brought salvation. Peace and freedom -- both national and personal -- come only
through an encounter with Jesus Christ.
I would
give anything to retract my actions of twenty-nine years ago at Pearl Harbor,
but it is impossible. Instead, I now work at striking the death-blow to the basic
hatred which infests the human heart and causes such tragedies. And that hatred
cannot be uprooted without assistance from Jesus Christ.
He is
the only One powerful enough to change my life and inspire it with His
thoughts. He was the only answer to Jake DeShazer's tormented life. He is the
only answer for young people today.
Originally
entitled, "From Pearl Harbor to
Golgotha" (1953)