The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Islanders who suffered war atrocities get paid

- By Anita Hofschneid­er

For Antonina Palomo Cross, Japan’s occupation of Guam started with terror at church. The then-7-yearold was attending Catholic services with her family when the 1941 invasion began, setting off bomb blasts, sirens and screams.

It ended with her family surrenderi­ng their home and eventually carrying the dead body of her malnourish­ed baby sister on a forced march to a concentrat­ion camp.

Now 85, Cross is among more than 3,000 native islanders on Guam who are expecting to get long-awaited compensati­on from the U.S. government for their suffering at the hands of imperial Japan during World War II.

Payments of $10,000 to $25,000 — federal tax money normally reserved for Guam’s coffers — will be made to those who underwent forced labor or internment, suffered severe injury or rape, or lost loved ones during the U.S. territory’s nearly three-year occupation.

A 1951 peace treaty forgave Japan of the responsibi­lity to pay reparation­s.

“I’m happy to get it,” Cross said after a recent meeting at central Guam’s newly opened war claims office, where she verified her payment was approved. The amount hasn’t been determined yet, but “every little bit helps,” she said.

Cross is retired from a local government job and relies on Social Security and her pension to get by. The great-grandmothe­r said the war claims money will come in handy for manåmko’ — “elders” in the language of Guam’s indigenous Chamorro people — like her.

The United States, which first captured Guam during the Spanish-American

War, had a small contingent of troops on the island when Japan invaded on the same December day that it attacked Pearl Harbor. Many were taken prisoner or killed.

But most of those affected by the occupation were Chamorro people, who suffered internment, torture, rape and beheadings. More than 1,100 are estimated to have died during the occupation.

For Cross’ family, it meant being forced from their house in Hagatña, the capital, to their rural farm about 5 miles (8.1 kilometers) away before being sent to a concentrat­ion camp in 1944. While living at the farm, Cross remembers hiding from foreign soldiers as she walked to her Japanese school, where she was forced to learn the Japanese language and bow in the direction of Japan with her classmates.

Her sister was among an unknown number of Chamorro children who died of malnutriti­on during the occupation, which ended when the U.S. returned and forced the Japanese to surrender in a bloody battle.

Receiving the compensati­on now is a bitterswee­t moment that caps decades of political efforts by Guam’s nonvoting U.S. House delegates to persuade Congress that the people of Guam deserve recognitio­n for their suffering under Japanese occupation.

“At the time the Chamorro people were experienci­ng this, there was a sense of abandonmen­t by the U.S., and that sentiment has not gone away,” former Guam Congressma­n Robert Underwood said.

President Barack Obama signed the Guam war claims measure in 2016. It provides $10,000 to those who underwent forced marches or internment, or had to escape internment; $12,000 to those who experience­d forced labor or personal injury; $15,000 to people who were severely injured or raped; and $25,000 to children, spouses and some parents of those killed during the occupation.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this Aug. 9, 1944 file photo, U.S. soldiers walk by a bombed out cemetery in Agana, Guam. The 1941Japane­se invasion of Guam, which happened on the same December day as the attack on Hawaii’s Pearl Harbor, set off years of forced labor, internment, torture, rape and beheadings.
ASSOCIATED PRESS In this Aug. 9, 1944 file photo, U.S. soldiers walk by a bombed out cemetery in Agana, Guam. The 1941Japane­se invasion of Guam, which happened on the same December day as the attack on Hawaii’s Pearl Harbor, set off years of forced labor, internment, torture, rape and beheadings.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States