The Borneo Post (Sabah)

WW2 veteran returns flag to family of fallen Japanese soldier

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TOKYO: When US Marine Marvin Strombo found a Japanese flag on the body of an enemy soldier during World War Two, he took and promised to one day return it to the family of his fallen foe.

That vow was fulfilled on Tuesday, exactly 72 years after Japan’s surrender, when Strombo, 93, handed the flag to the brother and sisters of Sadao Yasue.

Yasue, the eldest of six children from a farming town in central Japan, followed a common practice of carrying into battle a Japanese flag covered with messages and the signatures of family and friends.

Strombo said he found the flag on Yasue’s body after a 1944 battle on the island of Saipan, the site of fierce fighting in the Pacific war.

“I finally realised that if I didn’t take it, somebody else would have and it would be lost forever,” Strombo said in an interview provided by US forces.

“So the only way I could do that, as I reached out to take the flag, I made a promise to him that some day I would try to return it,” said Strombo, who travelled to Japan from the US state of Montana.

Strombo said he had intended to return the flag soon after the war but did not know how. About five years ago, he was put in touch with a nonprofit group that helps US veterans return artifacts to relatives.

The group tracked down Yasue’s family, who welcomed the flag with tears. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Strombo (centre) meets with Yasue (left) to hand over a Japanese flag Strombo found in a battlefiel­d in 1944, in Higashi-Shirakawa Village, Japan, in this photo taken by Kyodo. — Reuters photo
Strombo (centre) meets with Yasue (left) to hand over a Japanese flag Strombo found in a battlefiel­d in 1944, in Higashi-Shirakawa Village, Japan, in this photo taken by Kyodo. — Reuters photo

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