Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

75th anniversar­y of V-J Day mostly virtual

- By Caleb Jones

HONOLULU — When Japanese military leaders climbed aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on Sept. 2, 1945, the battleship was packed with U.S. sailors eager to see the end of World War II.

On Wednesday, the 75th anniversar­y of the surrender, some of those same men who served the United States were not be able to return to the Missouri in Hawaii’s Pearl Harbor because of the world’s new war against the coronaviru­s.

The commemorat­ion initially was supposed to be a blockbuste­r event with parades through Waikiki, movie premieres, galas and thousands of people gathered to honor the veterans, some who may be marking the historic milestone for the last time.

Only about 50 people were allowed on the ship that hosted the surrender in 1945, all local veterans and government officials. Defense Secretary Mark Esper gave the keynote address.

Organizers limited the ceremony less than two weeks before the anniversar­y because of a surge in coronaviru­s cases in Hawaii and other parts of the nation. That left dozens of veterans who are in their 90s or beyond preparing for what could be their final salute from afar.

Jerry Pedersen, 95, was a U.S. Marine on the deck of the Missouri witnessing the end of World War II. But on the 75th anniversar­y, Pedersen and his surviving comrades who live on the mainland could only watch a livestream of the event from their homes instead of seeing it in person on the ship as they had planned.

“Well, I was very disappoint­ed, yes. I was hoping to maybe see a friend or two,” he said. “I think we’re going to go ahead and have a little thing for ourselves here, and I just want to share with at least my family and a couple of other folks some of the feelings that I was going to express when I got there.”

“War must not happen again,” he said, recalling the words uttered by Gen. Douglas MacArthur on the day the Japanese surrendere­d. But “we’re still oscillatin­g on many of the things that are necessary to bring us peace.”

The U.S. entered the war after Japanese warplanes attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941.

“The clouds of war were gathering all around the United States, and the world for that matter,” said Daniel Martinez, Pearl Harbor National Memorial chief historian. “The United States had claimed neutrality. And that neutrality ended on the morning of December 7th.”

The result was thousands of dead and wounded, about half of which died on the USS Arizona, which still sits submerged in Pearl Harbor next to the USS Missouri Memorial, a floating museum.

Four years later, after massive losses on both sides that included the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the Japanese indicated they would surrender, then met with Allied forces aboard the Missouri on Sept. 2 to sign the Instrument of Surrender.

“The jubilation of the country was convulsive,” Martinez said. “Pictures that you see in Manhattan, pictures here in Honolulu, which had an incredible celebratio­n of peace.”

 ?? TERRY CHEA/AP ?? Jerry Pedersen shows a letter he sent home from aboard the USS Missouri on Sept. 2, 1945.
TERRY CHEA/AP Jerry Pedersen shows a letter he sent home from aboard the USS Missouri on Sept. 2, 1945.

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