Next Monday, May 6, the Giants will
celebrate their annual Japanese Heritage Night at AT&T Park by having
Lawson Sakai throw out the ceremonial first pitch.
Sakai, 89, is a veteran of E
Company, Second Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, the
Japanese American World War II regiment that was awarded more medals, man for
man, than any other military unit in American history.
"We are proud to recognize and
honor America’s Nisei veterans of World War II," says Shana Daum, Giants
vice president of public affairs and community relations. "Mr. Sakai
represents the members of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team who made incredible
sacrifices to protect our freedoms."
Four of those medals – all Purple
Hearts – went to Sakai, for grievous injuries suffered in combat. He was
actually wounded a fifth time, but he refused to let his name be put up for
another medal because he didn't think his wound was serious enough.
This will be the first pitch he has
thrown since Dec. 7, 1941, when he played third base for Compton Junior
College. On that day he was listening to a pro football game on the radio when
the broadcast was interrupted by a breathless announcement that Pearl Harbor
had been bombed.
Irate, he marched down to the local
Army recruiting office the next day to enlist. To his shock, he was told that
he was no longer an American. He was now classified 4-C – "Enemy
Alien," even though he was born right here in the USA.
The next thing he knew, he and his
family were rounded up, along with more than 110,000 other Japanese Americans,
and sent to euphemistically-named "relocation camps" out in the
boondocks of Utah, Colorado, Idaho and Arizona, where they spent the war behind
barbed wire, where guards with machine guns were ready to shoot anyone who
tried to escape.
Despite this, he and thousands of
other Japanese Americans volunteered to fight for the country that did this to
them.
During another time of national crisis
- the Revolutionary War - Thomas Paine wrote, "The summer soldier and the
sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country.
But he that stands it NOW deserves the love and thanks of man and woman."
Lawson Sakai and his band of
brothers in the 442 were winter soldiers. Their country may have betrayed them,
but when their country needed them most, they kept the faith. And they deserve
our love and thanks.
Every year on Armed Forces Day -
the third Saturday in May – the men of E Company meet at Roberts Park in
Oakland for a memorial service honoring their comrades who never came back.
And, once again, they invite you to join them.
Roberts Park is easy to find. Just
take Skyline Boulevard and follow the signs for the Chabot Space & Science
Center. About a mile before you get to the Center, you'll see a turnoff to
Roberts Park on your right.
Go though the first parking lot to
the second parking lot beyond it, and you'll spot me and a bunch of other
people. We'll gather there and then walk about a hundred yards or so into the
park to the site of the service.
The ceremony will start at Noon. See
you there.
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