The Southern Berks News

WWII diary finds its way home

- By Ron Devlin

DOUGLASSVI­LLE >> Judy Reitz was making turkey suppers in the kitchen at St. Paul’s UCC in Amityville when she got a call on her cellphone a couple months ago.

A diary from World War II had made its way back to the soldier’s family in Japan.

Indeed, the tiny black book was in the possession of Toshie Nagasawa, the soldier’s grandson, who lives in Fukushima Prefecture.

The news was the fulfillmen­t of hopes Reitz had when, in spring 2018, she sent the diary to the Obon Society in Oregon.

A nonprofit founded by Rex and Keiko Ziak, the society seeks to heal wartime wounds by returning Japanese flags and other materials to families in Japan.

“I had high hopes it would make its way back to his family,” said Reitz, 76, who taught

in the Daniel Boone School District for 32 years. “I felt his name might be somewhere in the writing.”

Seaman Merle K. Bock of Earlville was with the Navy Seabees on the island of Tinian in the Pacific Ocean, clearing jungle for a runway that would figure in the end of World War II.

It was from Tinian that the Enola Gay departed, carrying an atomic bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima on Aug. 6, 1945. Japan surrendere­d three days later, after a second atomic bomb was dropped on Nagasaki.

Resistance to American forces was strong, and Japanese troops were dug in, inhabiting caves on the island. In one of those caves, Bock removed the diary from a deceased Japanese soldier.

It wasn’t until Bock’s death in 1986 that Reitz, his daughter, got the diary. When attempts to have its printed characters translated failed, she tucked it away in a Tupperware sandwich container.

Then, early last year, she read a story in Reader’s Digest about an Oregon group that returned battlefiel­d souvenirs to Japan.

She wasted no time in rushing to the Douglassvi­lle post office and mailing

the treasured artifact to the Obon Society.

A year and a day later, Reitz received confirmati­on that the society had found the soldier’s grandson.

“It is our pleasure to report that we have found the family in Japan that belongs to your diary,” the society reported in an email dated April 6. “The Japanese family is eager to receive these remains.”

Included was the name of the soldier, Kiyoshichi Nagasawa, who died at Tinian Island on Aug. 2, 1944.

A resonant message

Of the 2 million Japanese soldiers who died in the war, Rex Ziak says, 1.1 million were declared missing in action.

A tiny box with a pebble or piece of coral in it, he says, was the only notificati­on families had that their loved one had died in combat.

So when diaries, Japanese flags or officers’ swords make their way back to Japan, still grief-stricken families rejoice. Nearly 74 years after the war ended in September 1945, emotional wounds have yet to heal.

“These items are the first and only trace of their loved one that these families have gotten,” Ziak says. “It is their only spiritual connection to them.”

Reitz strongly believes that battlefiel­d souvenirs brought home by GIs should be returned to Japan.

“We have an obligation to return them to their families,” she insists. “They don’t belong to us. They belong to them.”

In a letter to Toshie Nagasawa, Reitz told the story of how her father discovered

the diary while on a mission to search caves on the island.

“We always wondered how to get it back to his family,” wrote Reitz, who sent photos of her father and family. “My family and I are so happy that your grandfathe­r’s diary is now in your hands.”

Ziak founded the Obon Society with his wife, Keiko, a native of Japan. They work through a network of more than 500 scholars and volunteers in Japan to reunite families with wartime artifacts. The Oregon-based society can be reached by email at contact@obonsociet­y.org or on the web at obonsociet­y.org.

To Japanese families, he said, receiving a loved one’s possession is a more powerful link to Americans than diplomacy or goodwill among government­s.

“It’s the victor returning items out of the compassion of their hearts,” Ziak said. “It’s a message of peace and friendship that resonates throughout Japan.”

 ?? PHOOT COURTESY OF JUDY REITZ ?? Judy Reitz of Douglassvi­lle returned a World War II diary her father brought home to the family of the of the deceased Japanese soldier who wrote it. With it, she sent a letter saying she was happy that it went home. Reitz, third from left in front row, included this photo of her family.
PHOOT COURTESY OF JUDY REITZ Judy Reitz of Douglassvi­lle returned a World War II diary her father brought home to the family of the of the deceased Japanese soldier who wrote it. With it, she sent a letter saying she was happy that it went home. Reitz, third from left in front row, included this photo of her family.
 ?? RON DEVLIN - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Judy Reitz reads a letter telling her that the diary her father brought back from World War II had reached the grandson of the Japanese soldier to whom it had belonged.
RON DEVLIN - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Judy Reitz reads a letter telling her that the diary her father brought back from World War II had reached the grandson of the Japanese soldier to whom it had belonged.
 ?? RON DEVLIN - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Judy Dietz of Douglassvi­lle points to Fukushima Prefecture, home of Toshie Nagasawa, the grandson of a soldier whose diary her husband found on the Pacific Island of Tinian while serving in World War II.
RON DEVLIN - FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Judy Dietz of Douglassvi­lle points to Fukushima Prefecture, home of Toshie Nagasawa, the grandson of a soldier whose diary her husband found on the Pacific Island of Tinian while serving in World War II.
 ?? PHOOT COURTESY OF JUDY REITZ ?? Merle K. Bock of Earlville brough home a diary taken from a deceased Japanese soldier found in a cave on Tinian, an island in the Pacific Ocean. Bock was with a Navy Seabees unit on the island. His daughter, Judy Reitz of Douglassvi­lle, arranged trhough the Obon Society to return the diary to the Japanese soldier’s grandson, Toshie Nagasaw in Fukushima Prefecture.
PHOOT COURTESY OF JUDY REITZ Merle K. Bock of Earlville brough home a diary taken from a deceased Japanese soldier found in a cave on Tinian, an island in the Pacific Ocean. Bock was with a Navy Seabees unit on the island. His daughter, Judy Reitz of Douglassvi­lle, arranged trhough the Obon Society to return the diary to the Japanese soldier’s grandson, Toshie Nagasaw in Fukushima Prefecture.

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