In the last years
of his life, at the urging of those closest to him Professor Imamura (Shig)
wrote his memoir. He spent his first 10 years in San Francisco and then
moved with his family to Japan as an adolescent.
His memoir tells
the story of how a young American citizen was caught up in the atmosphere
of pre-war Japan, became "110% Japanese" and volunteered as a kamikaze.
In his memoir, Shig set out to explain how this could happen. His story,
however, does not describe a crisis of conscience, and while Shig recounts
dramatic events, it is not his style to dramatize them. His memoir is
a seemingly ordinary story, filled with quotidian detail. It is an account
of Shig's adjustment to Japan after living the first ten years of his
life in San Francisco. It describes the progression through local schools
of a bright young man who wants to fit in, to win the approval of his
teachers, his peers and his community, and who succeeds all too well in
doing so. It traces Shig's military career, starting from the point where
he eagerly seizes an opportunity as a reserve naval aviator. It describes
his training, his growing expertise, his promotions and his work as a
flight instructor. It tells how he survived the war only through the indifferent
caprice of fate. It is only with the accumulation of detail and the occasional
toss-away comment about what he was told to think about the epic struggle
between his two countries, that the reader realizes that Shig's story
delivers a powerful anti-war message. It celebrates the independent critical
thinking essential for rejection of the absolutes tyranny and totalitarianism. |