The requested article has expired, and is no longer available. Any related articles, and user comments are shown below.
© Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.Japanese-American WWII war hero Ben Kuroki dies
CAMARILLO, California©2025 GPlusMedia Inc.
Video promotion
24 Comments
Login to comment
PTownsend
RIP Mr. Kuroki.
Gobshite
That's a good story, RIP Kuroki
Sensato
During my childhood I was fascinated by the stories of men from Ben Kuroki's generation, and now most of them are no longer with us. RIP Mr. Kuroki.
Interview of Ben Kuroki: http://www.ww2online.org/view/ben-kuroki/segment-1
yamashi
What is the purpose of this article ? Is it considered that Japanese people must be proud of him ?
Wc626
He's a hero. Like "Davy Crockett".
ebisen
Japanese people should thank him for his service. He, and his colleagues are the reason the whole of Japan does not speak Russian right now.
glasshouse
What is the point of your comment?
yamashi
@ebisen "the whole of Japan does not speak Russian right now"
Rubbish of American origin. After hard experience of American occupation Japan still use native language, not American English.
@glasshouse "What is the point of your comment?"
He fought Japanese people being a pure American servant. He is not a Hero for Japan.
glasshouse
@yamanashi Did anywhere say the he is a Hero for Japan? Did he receive war medals in Japan at all? Maybe you should stick to your native Language as well....
jerseyboy
Not a particularly positive time in American history, and one which many Amercians, myself included, are not very proud of. But what we can take pride in is:
Luckily the U.S. got past the bigotry that irrational fear had caused in the early 1940's and men like Kuroda quickly became part of the fabric of the country, and, more importantly, publicly recognized him for his bravery,
bruinfan
RIP...Ben is a true hero.
gabrial888
The reverse would never have happened in Japan at its xenophobic height.
Hawkeye
I admire the Japanese Americans like Ben Kuroki and their strong resolve despite the fact that they got the really short end of the stick during WWII. I visited the Japanese American museum in San Jose a few years back and I had many tears in my eyes during the presentation. Japanese Americans were treated with no respect and lost everything they had despite the fact that they assimilated back into the US society that shunned them and were the most decorated military group in WWII in Europe as the 442nd infantry. The discrimination that Japanese Americans suffered compared to the German or Italian Americans is incredible to say the least. Just because they looked different than a white European descendent of even Germans or Italians made them an enemy on the eyes of the US government, what garbage. My wife's ancestors came to the US to farm and eventually returned to Japan due to the Sino discriminatory attitudes in the early 20th century which is a shame. They contributed as doctors, dentists, farmers, shopkeepers etc. and did not discriminate like other Asian minorities at that time, and made a mark in the business and culture of the western United states.
heynong
Japanese people should call him as traitor. Because of his indiscriminate bombing , Many innocent children and elderly lost the limbs and arms. He shamed and humiliated his ancestors. He was the embarrassment for Japan although he was a hero for US.
turbotsat
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ry%C5%8D_Kurusu
gabrial888
Turbotsat, thanks for the info. It broadened my horizons. Writing something on the discussion board leading to an eyeopener is a gratifying experience. I stand corrected. Both sides had their heroes then. RIP to both of them. I'm curious as to how his mother Alice was treated during the war. This I write with no malicious intent to blame either side.
shallots
@heynong Yes, that is generally what the U.S. government figured at the time. I guess you would say the same of German-Americans? Don't you have a better reason to support or oppose a war than what you imagine your ancestors would have thought? If he was wrong to drop bombs on children and the elderly then it doesn't matter if they have an ethnic resemblance, does it? Ethnic nationalism is one of humanity's most pernicious modern ideas.
Bossu
At first glance, it's odd for me to find a story about an American war hero who served primarily in the European Theater of WWII on Japantoday, a site about life in Japan, the country itself and the people that live there. The man was an American whose ancestors just happened to be Japanese, and many people of his background were persecuted during WWII by those who those hastily inferred that they have substantial connections with Japan, the country itself, and therefore disloyal to America. However, I'm not saying that the good people Japantoday have misplaced intentions to publish this story here, not at all. I bet some of them are Americans themselves who thought the guy deserves recognition wherever possible, and I don't blame them for thinking that and choosing to publish it here. After all, it's well known that the US media has a bias against Asians at large. Most of the time when we see Asians on mainstream American TV, cinema or media, if not exclusively, is when they fit the bill of negative racial stereotypes (including that submissive Asian woman/white male dynamic). So good on you JT.
ebisen
Yamashi: After hard experience of American occupation
Japan has NO IDEA what occupation by a foreign force means. Tell your bullshit to the East European countries under the USSR :( and see how they react!
turbotsat
More info on his father's wikipedia page. They had two daughters younger than Ryo, who both married Americans, and Alice Little adopted another daughter after her husband died.
I guess she wasn't treated badly, it looks like she stayed on in Japan after the war, and her daughters moved back to the States.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabur%C5%8D_Kurusu
gabrial888
Thank you again, turbosat, for the info. that gives a glimpse into the lives of those who've gone on what must have been extraordinary cross-cultural rides. I agree with your sense that Alice wasn't treated badly. Alice and her children's firsthand accounts in the war time if exist would provide a lot of fresh perspective on Japan at the time. Also for Saburo Kurusu her husband who tried to negotiate peace before the attack on Peal Harbor, it must have been wrenching, frustrating experience to see Japan go into war against the U.S.
turbotsat
You are welcome. I haven't read them, but there is a historical novel based on the family ("Riding the East Wind" by Otohiko Kaga), at Amazon, also a memoir written in 1958 by an American woman in the same situation ("Bridge to the Sun: A Memoir of Love and War"): married to Japanese diplomat, interned in USA, repatriated on the same ship. Kurusu himself wrote a book, "Ho to fikushon", I don't know what it's about, though.
justbcuzisay
I wonder if yamanashi was trying to comment on the fact that this article is under the 'national' section of the paper? That was a strange place to put it. It should be under 'world' news, as this veteran was not a Japanese national.
gabrial888
Turbosat, much appreciated for the further references. I add them to my future reading list. Good stuff.