Chicago Sun-Times

A MARINE COMES HOME

Remains of 18-year-old Blue Island man who died in World War II battle recovered from remote Pacific atoll

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter

The phone call sounded like a scam intended to appeal to Ken Oetjen’s sense of patriotism and family. Was Oetjen, the caller asked, related to Charles Edward Oetjen, a Marine private from Blue Island who died in World War II?

Charles was indeed Ken Oetjen’s second cousin, though all he knew was that Charles was killed 10 years before Ken was born. Was Oetjen’s family interested in recovering his remains from Tarawa, a distant atoll in the Pacific Ocean? the caller asked.

It had taken dozens of investigat­ors more than a decade to unearth Oejten. He was one of hundreds of U.S. troops, and thousands of Japanese, buried in mass graves scattered on Tarawa, a narrow spit of sand and coral covering a little more than two square miles.

Charles Oetjen’s remains will arrive at O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport on Friday, roughly 73 years after the 18-year-old left his home on Walnut Street for basic training. Burial with full military honors will take place at 10 a.m. Saturday at First Evangelica­l Lutheran Cemetery in Alsip.

“I tell you, it sounded like one of those things, where they ask you to send them money,” recalled Ken Oetjen, who knew little about his cousin; Charles Oetjen’s short life was seldom discussed at family gatherings.

“Maybe that’s why they never talked about it, because he’d never made it back. We never knew.”

Ken Oetjen has learned a great deal about his cousin, and the Battle of Tarawa, in the 18 months since the call from History Flight investigat­or Paul Dostie. A retired police detective, Dostie had visited the island several times with his cadaver-sniffing dog.

For three days in November 1943, Tarawa was the site of some of the bloodiest battles of the Pacific Theater. More than 6,000 Japanese and American troops were killed on an atoll just 800 yards across at its widest point.

All Ken Oetjen could recall his father saying of his cousin was that he died in combat “and never made it out of the lagoon,” Ken Oetjen recalled. That descriptio­n of Charles’ final moments could easily be true, said History Flight founder Mark Noah.

The landing at Tarawa was a bloodbath, and Oetjen’s unit was in the first wave. The Japanese had heavily fortified the island, and seasonal

low tides meant the landing craft could not get past a reef surroundin­g the atoll. The Marines had to wade to the beach, up to half a mile, into withering machine-gun fire.

The massive casualties and tropical heat meant the fallen were buried in mass graves. Then, the rush to build an airstrip meant the locations of hundreds of Marines’ bodies were lost. Military officials ended the official search for remains in the 1950s.

History Flight has devoted more than a decade to the search, and maintains two offices on Tarawa, where concrete Japanese bunkers still line the beaches and residents regularly stumble across bones and unexploded ordinance, said Mark Noah, History Flight president.

For more than a decade, staff and volunteers for History Flight have tracked occasional discoverie­s, pored over old photos and accounts of the battle, and probed Tarawa with ground-penetratin­g radar and cadaversni­ffing dogs, trying to determine the location of grave sites.

Peace Corps volunteers digging a hole for a lamppost in 2002 found the body of a Marine, History Flight volunteers learned more than a decade later. It took two years to find that lamp post, when Dostie spotted a Facebook page run by Peace Corps alumni. In 2010, Dostie visited the atoll with his dog, which led him to the burial site. Soon after, ground-penetratin­g radar found irregulari­ties in the soil.

Oetjen’s remains were the first identified among 43 Marines whose bodies had been laid in a trench and covered with sand. Oetjen was identified from his reconstruc­ted dog tag and dental records.

Buried with him was Lt. Alexander “Sandy” Bonnyman, who received the Medal of Honor for leading a mission to bomb a Japanese bunker. A building and parking lot had been built over the burial site.

“Once we had Charles Oetjen, we knew we had found the 8th Marines, Cemetery No. 2,” Noah said.

It took another two years to fully exhume the bodies, Noah said, who said the effort took more than 40 staff and volunteers, and some $3 million. Hundreds more bodies remain scattered around the island, as well as several thousand Japanese soldiers and Korean forced laborers.

And who was Charles Oetjen? His family is learning only now.

Since that first phone call, Ken Oetjen has devoured History Channel documentar­ies. He and his sisters reached out to the Blue Island Historical Society, which had a box with farewell cards and a few short letters home from the lonesome young Marine. Yearbook photos from Blue Island High School, long ago renamed Eisenhower, show Charles played baseball and basketball.

Charles Oetjen dropped out of high school to enlist. After training in San Diego and New Zealand, the 18-year-old Oetjen and the rest of the 2nd Marine Division joined the assault on Tarawa. Based on his enlistment date, Tarawa might have been Charles Oetjen’s first time in combat, Ken Oetjen said.

“I think he was just a typical young kid who wanted to go out and fight to defend his country,” Ken Oetjen said. “I tell you, I have teared up a couple times since all this started. I’m sure I will again.”

For informatio­n about funeral services, contact Krueger Funeral Home at (708) 388-1300 or visit http://www.kruegerfun­eral.com

 ?? | PROVIDED PHOTO ?? U.S. Marine Pvt. Charles Edward Oetjen played baseball and basketball at Blue Island High School.
| PROVIDED PHOTO U.S. Marine Pvt. Charles Edward Oetjen played baseball and basketball at Blue Island High School.
 ?? | PROVIDED PHOTO ?? LEFT: A team of volunteers and staff from the nonprofit History Flight, excavates the site of a mass grave holding the bodies of U.S. Marines killed in the 1943 Battle of Tarawa.
| PROVIDED PHOTO LEFT: A team of volunteers and staff from the nonprofit History Flight, excavates the site of a mass grave holding the bodies of U.S. Marines killed in the 1943 Battle of Tarawa.
 ?? | SUN-TIMES LIBRARY PHOTOS ?? Marines on the beach at Tarawa take their positions to attack the airport.
| SUN-TIMES LIBRARY PHOTOS Marines on the beach at Tarawa take their positions to attack the airport.
 ??  ?? Americans who died on Tarawa were buried in shallow graves.
Americans who died on Tarawa were buried in shallow graves.

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