442nd Regimental Combat Team

USMCGrunt

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Just saw a special on this unit. I never knew the history and I hope that it impresses you as much as it did me.

 
I just watched it too. I knew the story already. Pretty incredible that young men put in concentration camps would volunteer to fight for the country that put them there.

There was a pretty good old (1951) movie entitled “Go For Broke” starring Van Johnson and some actual Nisei vets that pretty much told the story with a slight Hollywood slant. But overall it wasn’t bad. But they hardly ever play, and probably very few would now watch, that old movie, so this documentary is very important.
 
I saw some documentary about 10 years back. Impressive unit. Seen the Van Johnson movie too. He's pretty bigoted at the beginning, but comes around... part of the point of the movie. There is a Medal of Honor series on either Netflix or Amazon that has an episode on one of their Medal of Honor awardees. They had something to prove and prove it they did.
 
Google the late Senator Daniel Inouye and read about how he served in the 442nd as a 2LT.

His story of how he came to be awarded the MOH is truly courageous.

 
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My first memory of Sen. Inouye was watching the Watergate Hearings on our only TV and my father controlled the programming. Of course, I was the channel changer. I remember that he stood out among all the old white guys and thinking something like, "Who is that "Chinese" guy? And why is he missing an arm?"

Certain stories never get old and this is one of them. I love stories that reaffirm my belief that this is a great country. I got into a back and forth a few weeks about the importance of diversity, that it isn't just a feel good line. This history is a point by point affirmation of my opinion on the matter. There isn't a country or military that can replicate it.
 
He was in the Ken Burns WW2 films as well. That's where I first heard this story.
 
Former Senator Bob Dole (age 98 now), met the late Senator Inouye in 1945 at the hospital where both junior Army officers were mending combat wounds from battlegrounds that were only about a mile apart in Italy. Dole was a 2LT with the 10th Mountain, and Inouye a 2LT with the 442nd Regimental Combat team as described above.

It was at Percy Jones Army Hospital that they became friends, both suffering from permanent physical wounds (Dole had lost use of his right arm, and Inouye missing his) but yet they had undeterred spirit and will. They were political opposites, yet became life-long friends.

Dole wrote the following about Inoyue:


"On April 21, 1945, Danny Inouye committed one of the most courageous acts in Army history as he charged up a hillside in Italy. He was a member of the famed 442nd Regimental Combat Team, comprised of Japanese Americans who swore an oath to serve our nation despite the extreme distrust and prejudice they and their loved ones faced at home. Some of those men fought even as their families were locked in America’s internment camps. They became and remain the Army’s most highly decorated regiment.
As Danny fought his way up the hill, his breast pocket carried the two silver dollars that stopped a bullet aimed at his heart earlier in the war. He was determined to take out the enemy’s machine gun nests, battling his way forward, even after he was shot in the stomach. When he was finally within reach of the nest, he pulled the pin on a grenade and prepared to throw, but a German’s rifle grenade struck and nearly severed his raised arm at the elbow. He waved off medical help in case the grenade became loose in a grip he could no longer control. Astoundingly, he managed to take the grenade in his other hand and throw it toward the enemy before collapsing.
Danny was evacuated just a week after I suffered my own combat injuries on an Italian hillside. Our battlefields were only a mile apart. We first met weeks later in Percy Jones Army Hospital in Battle Creek, Mich. Danny arrived there ahead of me. He weighed just 93 pounds and was now missing his arm, but he was upbeat and optimistic. His surgeries were complete, and he was rehabilitating. I was laying on a stretcher. My surgeries were yet to come.
Recovering from combat wounds can be a long, painful and often emotionally challenging process. It’s hard to describe the importance of having a close friend who can be a confidant, an empathetic ear and a good distraction. We played a lot of bridge, and Danny was as good as they come.
Danny and I spoke shortly before his release from the hospital. His injuries would keep him from fulfilling his dream of becoming a doctor, so he asked what I intended to do when I was released. I shared my intention to run for political office, starting locally in Kansas and working my way up to the Senate, and hopefully higher.
Danny famously followed, “the Bob Dole plan.” And, as history proves, he was as great a politician as he was a bridge player. He managed to be elected to the Senate before me. Shortly after taking office, he called me and said, “Bob I’m here. Where are you?”
Sen. Daniel Inouye was an extremely effective senator. He was not partisan. He worked with everyone, and he never said a bad word about a colleague. When Danny passed away, I paid my respects as he lay in state in the U.S. Capitol’s rotunda. Both injuries and time had begun to get the best of me, so I spent much of my time seated. But I made sure to walk up to Danny’s casket. He dedicated and nearly gave his life to our nation. He deserved one more standing salute."
Bob Dole salutes the casket of Daniel Inouye
Dole at Inoye's Funeral in 2012. Sen. Bob Dole was assisted to the casket of Sen. Daniel Inouye (who died in 2012) saying 'I wouldn't want Danny to see me in a wheelchair.'​
Senator Bob Dole, left, sitting with Senator Daniel Inouye

Earlier times, two Army veterans, CAPT Dole and 1LT Inouye chatting in the Senate.


References: (retrieved 11/15/2021)
Bob Dole Pays Tribute to Fellow Soldier, Friend (aarp.org)
Bob Dole - Wikipedia
 
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