| According
to news accounts, Sergeant Yokoi (Imperial Japanese Army)
was found and captured January 25, 1972, after hiding in the
jungles of Guam for twenty-eight years. The capture of Sergeant
Yokoi was headline news worldwide. The story of the lon man's
twenty-eight years of hiding and surviving with very little
contact with "civilization" captured the attention
of the world. When Yokoi stepped out of Guam's jungles he
stepped out from the silence of the Talofofo river valley
into the jet age. Remarkably Yokoi had correctly calculated
the time that had passed while in the jungle and knew that
the year was 1972 when he was captured.
A
tailor by trade, Yokoi was uniquely suited for survival on
the island of Guam. He was practical to a fault, rarely imagined
problems, or let his imagination hinder his perceived need
to hide. Yokoi was not alone in the jungles of Guam all of
the time he was in hiding. Eight years prior to Yokoi's capture,
two other Japanese soldiers died of malnutrition and disease.
The two soldiers that hid out in the same area were the only
humans Yokoi had any contact with. It was agreed between the
three Japanese soldiers that they should limit their contact
between each other as to avoid detection. Yokoi buried his
compatriots in a cave and directed officials to this site
soon after he was captured.
Yokoi
was able to keep from getting ringworm, lice infestations
and other infectious diseases by bathing frequently and thoroughly.
He was remarkably healthy when he was found. He lived by trapping
shrimp, fish, and rats and eating jungle vegetation. His movements
were restricted to the night hours. The thick jungle in the
area where Yokoi stayed helped him remain hidden.
Jesus
Duenas and Manuel DeGracia were out checking fish traps when
they saw Yokoi near a small river. Manuel and Jesus though
at first that Yokoi was a young man from their village who
sometimes roamed the jungle.
Approaching
Yokoi under this impression, they surprised Yokoi. DeGracia
and Duenas were able to subdue Yokoi and brought the man out
of the jungle tied and only slightly bruised. Little credit
seems to be given to the fact that Manul DeGracia was gentle
with the man. Japanese stragglers were ruthlessly hunted down
and killed by local men who despised the Japanese as a result
of atrocities committed by Imperial Japanese forces during
their occupation of Guam.
Two
grenades and a 155mm artillery shell were the only weapons
found in the caves. The cave where the two compatriots were
buried, as well as Yokoi's cave, were cleverly concealed and
absolutely impossible to find if you did not know where to
look.
Yokoi's
twenty-eight years of hiding and deprivation can be seen as
testimony to the strength of the human spirit, or as just
another sad episode in the ongoing saga of warfare. Yokoi
returned to Guam several times since his capture. He visited
Jeff's Pirates Cove and enjoyed our great food and seaside
setting. Sergeant Yokoi died in 1997.
|