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Meeting Japan’s World War II orphans born to US soldiers and Japanese mothers • FRANCE 24 English

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  • Опубликовано: 20 июн 2024
  • In Japan, they are known as "children of mixed blood": those born after 1945 to an American GI and a Japanese woman and abandoned due to stigma. Eighty years after the end of World War II, we went to meet some of these orphans to understand more about their painful past.
    Read more about this story in our article: f24.my/AQAH.y
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Комментарии • 512

  • @purberri
    @purberri Месяц назад +988

    I was born to a Japanese mother in Tokyo 1958. I lived with her until age 5. I was adopted by American parents and came to the U.S. My mother never prepared me. The day I was turned over to my new parents I was brought to an office building and told to wait until she walked away down the hall. I never saw her again. My adoptive parents told me the same thing she put me up for adoption because of the prejudice I would face. I don’t exhibit many Asian features I look Caucasian. Never had any issues living in America. People are very surprised when I tell them I’m half Japanese.

    • @bobbyclemente21
      @bobbyclemente21 Месяц назад +97

      Sad to hear, I'm sure you would like to know what became of your mom. My brother was born at Tachikawa Hospital (off base) in June 1959 and our parents married in May. That's a tight window that made me think later in life that my dad might've been thinking to leave her instead of marrying her...cause why would you wait that late. I never confronted him or rather asked him about it. He was a good father while my Jpnse mom was a great mother, couldn't ask for anyone better.
      Anyway, sadly, lot of people who were also in same situation as you all over Asia where US troops were stationed...but best wishes!

    • @mrsTraveller64
      @mrsTraveller64 Месяц назад +17

      purberri: how do you feel about your story? Are you sad? Do you feel Japanese at all? Do you feel you want to learn Japanese or visite Japan?

    • @user-gk5rg4pq5x
      @user-gk5rg4pq5x Месяц назад

      @@ВивсівідстійYou aren’t very bright.

    • @graceg3250
      @graceg3250 Месяц назад +48

      It could be that she thought she was doing the most loving thing she could. She probably loved you far more than you knew. So sad!

    • @sky-pv7ff
      @sky-pv7ff Месяц назад

      @@purberri I am sure you looked a little bit asian. The whites just gave you a pass as a white. There's lots of people passing as white and don't even look white.😆

  • @phammond8155
    @phammond8155 Месяц назад +570

    That "mama" was amazing, daughter of the Mitsubishi fortune. She sure put it to good use, bless her. What one person can do to change so many lives.

    • @user-jl2qr8ws1m
      @user-jl2qr8ws1m Месяц назад +35

      Thank you for taking an interest in this! My mother was also an illegitimate child. Although it was very hard for her, she was still lucky to have relatives who raised her with love.

    • @phammond8155
      @phammond8155 Месяц назад +14

      @@user-jl2qr8ws1m This story has profoundly affected me.

  • @saltyroe3179
    @saltyroe3179 Месяц назад +331

    My wife is a child of GI who worked for MacArthur and a Japanese mother. She is very fortunate because my father in law married my mother in law and brought both my mother in law and my wife to USA where they stayed married and succeeded in life against bigotry and other obstacles. Many of the Japanese war brides who did make it to the USA were abandoned by their GI husbands.
    For those children who were abandoned, life was very difficult. My wife observed some of them in late 1960s sweeping streets.

  • @livinglife8333
    @livinglife8333 Месяц назад +65

    My Great Uncle married a Japanese lovely lady and brought her to the United States. My uncles side of the family treated her well and protected her from the bigotry then. She was the sweetest woman and treated us all well.

  • @howardharris576
    @howardharris576 27 дней назад +50

    My late wife Yoshiko and I were married in Tokyo in 1958.
    We spent 50 wonderful years
    Together and had 2 sons.

  • @michaelcauser474
    @michaelcauser474 Месяц назад +47

    I am a 76yo pure bred English born man and I have no tolerance at all for racial discrimination, as so did my parents. I have people of many races and colours married into my extended family and ALL are equal to the white family members. Having lived in Australia for the last 56 years I now have friends of many different ethnic backgrounds and religions. All have equal standing with my Australian family. My hope is that the World learns that all people are equal regardless of their background.
    Thank you for bringing this video to us to help progress this hope.

    • @jeffharris7777
      @jeffharris7777 16 дней назад +4

      I see a future with no racism.

    • @sarahrean7174
      @sarahrean7174 13 дней назад

      ​@@jeffharris7777 no with uk riot against immigrants the world became more and more like Hitler was in power

    • @michaelcauser474
      @michaelcauser474 13 дней назад +4

      @@sarahrean7174 Hello Sarah. Maybe I did not pick the best way to describe it, but I have researched over 300 years of my ancestors and know that they were all English born, mostly farm workers or miners. Mainly people who would have found it very difficult to leave their birth area to look for a life partner. Relatives from my parents generation on have not been restricted by being confined to one small area and have had the ability to marry partners from outside their small village or town. I am not trying to be condescending in what I was trying to say, simply stating that I and my family and friends do not tolerate racial prejudice in any form.

    • @marilynwillett804
      @marilynwillett804 3 дня назад

      @@michaelcauser474 They married into your family BECAUSE you are white and English born, But of course you can't or won't see that.I I've lived in other countries I've seen it all. They WANT white in their children, that my dear is racism, you seem to think only white folks can be racist.

    • @marilynwillett804
      @marilynwillett804 3 дня назад

      They married into your family because you are caucasian and British born.

  • @wylde39
    @wylde39 Месяц назад +207

    That tunnel run is so sad and such a shared experience for those kids. It reminds me of spirited away… how you can be in one world, and then suddenly your life is totally different and confusing.

    • @teesmith501
      @teesmith501 Месяц назад +9

      Imagine what the Japanese war brides and their children experienced in America when they immigrated there right after the war. Imagine it wasn't all wine and roses

    • @tomallen5837
      @tomallen5837 Месяц назад +4

      Everything is about the bomb unfortunately. Of course, that's my opinion, and I think Spirited Away is no different. Furthermore, I'm currently plowing through Godzilla Minus One. It's the same thing. In fact this rendition with regards to the bomb is even more in your face..
      This is an excellent video, by the way. I've learned a lot from this video... things I did not know... but I'm not surprised.

    • @richr0ll
      @richr0ll Месяц назад +6

      That's the same thought I had! I wonder if Spirited Away was also inspired by stories of children being separated from their parents.

    • @mandieeleaver3321
      @mandieeleaver3321 29 дней назад +5

      The tunnel is extremely sad. The whole situation is sad.

  • @foxbody1152
    @foxbody1152 Месяц назад +172

    Man imagine getting dropped off at the abandonment tunnel

    • @kimpiero2525
      @kimpiero2525 Месяц назад +8

      I cried after hearing that especially after seeing the photo at 4:18 . They were so little.

    • @pauldeanda4985
      @pauldeanda4985 Месяц назад +9

      Based on my personality, I would have never forgiven those who had made me! 🤷‍♂️

    • @asakinzel4795
      @asakinzel4795 28 дней назад +2

      Yea that’s fuct up.

    • @chocolatecookie8571
      @chocolatecookie8571 8 дней назад +4

      Very traumatic experience

  • @patrisha7487
    @patrisha7487 28 дней назад +39

    I am half Japanese, born to a Japanese mother & an American GI(Marine). My father married my mother when I was 5 months old much to the dismay of the Marine Corp. We came to the USA in 1958. It was difficult growing up as a half Japanese child, but I think it would have been more difficult in Japan.

    • @jeffmorse645
      @jeffmorse645 8 дней назад +1

      Depends on where you grew up. In California it was less of an issue because mixed race kids are so common.

    • @rickhayhoe
      @rickhayhoe 2 дня назад

      @@jeffmorse645 ". . .are so common . . ." Yes, but that's today, while 1958 was then, and it was a whole lot different, even in California, my home state. (80Y/O white guy here)

  • @chickentender72
    @chickentender72 Месяц назад +88

    Tony seems like such a good dude. I wanna give him a hug

  • @wassiexoxo4462
    @wassiexoxo4462 Месяц назад +28

    Josephine Baker adopted kids from Elizabeth Saunders Home and she also donated a lot.
    What a wonderful lady and I love her.

  • @msjapan112
    @msjapan112 Месяц назад +246

    Yes, many of them, during Korean War, Vietnam War too.

    • @user-gk5rg4pq5x
      @user-gk5rg4pq5x Месяц назад +28

      Every war since the beginning of time.

    • @user-er3ri6sc3j
      @user-er3ri6sc3j Месяц назад +10

      Yes east Asia and westerners such as American occupation.

    • @vndragonslayer1
      @vndragonslayer1 Месяц назад

      @@user-er3ri6sc3j compared to the japanese imperialist who just rape the local women wherever they went right?

    • @Wann-zo7rn2qn4i
      @Wann-zo7rn2qn4i Месяц назад +6

      Those whom the GIs brought home were the lucky ones. There are many more who were abandoned as they were the result of rapes, brothels and fun nights. The men just disappeared.

    • @Truthseeker371
      @Truthseeker371 Месяц назад

      German and English women also married to the US soldiers during the WWII.

  • @victorjackson150
    @victorjackson150 Месяц назад +147

    This was absolutely heartbreaking. I was a teacher of mixed-raced children in Okinawa. It was tough to see. As a half German and half English growing up between the two countries, we experienced a feeling of being abandoned by each county. Never German enough and never English enough. That’s the hard part.

    • @victorjackson150
      @victorjackson150 Месяц назад +2

      @@SongsAboutHappiness Absolutely.

    • @ijustamthem
      @ijustamthem Месяц назад +1

      ​@@SongsAboutHappiness yes easily! -grew up in Japan

    • @viikmaqic
      @viikmaqic Месяц назад +9

      @@SongsAboutHappiness If you are born in Sweden and always see swedes, you would be able to tell a fin, german, english out by looks alone. even if its slight difference

    • @JGoya_Seiboshi
      @JGoya_Seiboshi Месяц назад +4

      As the video says, Okinawa has had that problem much longer, sice US bases are still there. Anyway, Okinawans are more open than the rest of Japan so I hope those innocent children are not having a hard time. Thanks for being a teacher for those kids!

    • @samuraijosh1595
      @samuraijosh1595 Месяц назад

      ​@@viikmaqicno all white people look the same.

  • @medusagorgon8432
    @medusagorgon8432 Месяц назад +38

    People are so strange and toxic in their ignorance. Those who mistreated these children would be horrified to find themselves in a similar situation.

    • @user-fx5sw1cn7j
      @user-fx5sw1cn7j Месяц назад +1

      japanese don't fall for that dei bullsht

  • @Lp-ze1tg
    @Lp-ze1tg Месяц назад +73

    For those who got married at that time with mix-cultures were brave. Considered what happened between two countries just few years ago.
    For those who was abandoned, it was a tragic because children are innocent by their birth race.

    • @meloncrusher3316
      @meloncrusher3316 Месяц назад

      Most arent married, most are considered rape by westerners standard

  • @cgreene1000
    @cgreene1000 Месяц назад +139

    Those children are absolutely beautiful. Every single one of them.

    • @nzrock1
      @nzrock1 Месяц назад +10

      @@oliverkat Get your own mind out of that gutter lmfao, OP didn't make it look weird, you did Oliverkat.

    • @oliverkat
      @oliverkat Месяц назад

      @@nzrock1 🤡

    • @lynettetaravella2578
      @lynettetaravella2578 25 дней назад +1

      I do understand that to some degree: I'm a Filipina-American (with a little bit of Chinese and Spanish) mother of two teenaged Eurasian kids. My kids are half Filipino, half Italian with a little bit of Chinese and Spanish.

  • @sarahogawa5408
    @sarahogawa5408 Месяц назад +98

    What a wonderful school at the end! The students look happy and confident.

    • @M-Is-For-Margaret
      @M-Is-For-Margaret Месяц назад +12

      Yes 👍 One of my neighbors is a Ghanaian man. He was married to a Japanese woman. When his daughter was young and going to a Japanese elementary school, she was bullied. He went to the school and spoke to her teacher. (I wondered why his wife didn't go. She wasn't working, so she could've easily gone instead of him.) If he had a great job, he would've sent her to an international school. But the tuition was too much, so his daughter had to go to a public school. His daughter might've thrived at that school in Okinawa. I wonder how much the tuition is at that mixed race students only school.🤔

    • @localmilfchaser6938
      @localmilfchaser6938 Месяц назад

      @@M-Is-For-Margaret I hope it’s free

  • @CUMBICA1970
    @CUMBICA1970 Месяц назад +33

    I'm Japanese-Brazilian and Miki Sawada's story is pretty well-known among the Japanese community. Especially because she left Japan in the early 1960s with a number of her orphans to naively found an self-sustaining utopia in the Amazon jungle. With disastrous results I must add. Still one remarkable woman who did good with her fortune.

    • @ATOQ777
      @ATOQ777 Месяц назад +4

      Are you sure you got the right person? I haven't found any Amazon community related to her.

    • @Yowzoe
      @Yowzoe Месяц назад +5

      I do remember reading about such a community, but I do not believe it involved Miki Sawada, and in a quick online search I don’t find anything (you would think it would be on her Wikipedia page, for example).

  • @manchu-qu9mw
    @manchu-qu9mw 4 дня назад +3

    It is very sad how the innocent children had to endure the pain. Stop the insane war.

  • @kentuckylady2990
    @kentuckylady2990 Месяц назад +179

    British, Canadians and Australians left children behind.

    • @silviaquesada2499
      @silviaquesada2499 Месяц назад +67

      every time soldiers are in the country of the enemy they leave children behind. This happened in most wars over millenia on all continents.

    • @SVanTha
      @SVanTha Месяц назад +11

      @@silviaquesada2499 it don't have to be enemy lands...

    • @TheKingOfBeans
      @TheKingOfBeans Месяц назад +2

      So did Germans… it was part of their policy

    • @tomthepeaceful
      @tomthepeaceful Месяц назад

      African American GI’s left children in England, the Netherlands and Germany after ww2

    • @CapoElChivo
      @CapoElChivo Месяц назад +9

      The Elizabeth Saunders home mentioned for example was almost exclusively half American kids. The American military kid population was pretty unique in size from WWII to modern day in Japan, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Americans put up numbers like Spain did during the conquest of the Americas. Unlike the nations you mentioned, the American children were born almost exclusively out of wedlock, because most of these kids were and are born to soldiers. There werent British, Canadian, or Australian military bases in Japan, and countries with British or Australian bases just dont see the same amount of interracial orphans as with American soldiers.

  • @NarcFreedom
    @NarcFreedom Месяц назад +13

    Shame on these American men who presently abandon their children in Okinawa. If the military doesn’t have rules to enforce child support, it should.

    • @evilborg
      @evilborg Месяц назад +3

      It's not just Americans that did this, Canadian military did this as well in Japan.... nearly every country military does take for instance what wars in the middle east do to each other.

  • @Conn30Mtenor
    @Conn30Mtenor 14 дней назад +4

    Love and compassion changes lives and through their lives the world is changed.

  • @charzemc
    @charzemc Месяц назад +197

    American GI's left abandoned women & children all over the world.
    There are probably cases, wherever a US military base is.

    • @codename495
      @codename495 Месяц назад +49

      Wherever any military base is.

    • @breezymango4113
      @breezymango4113 Месяц назад +52

      Why are you only saying American? There are Many countries and peoples who have done it, sometimes much worse as well. It certainly isn't only an American "thing".

    • @csking6377
      @csking6377 Месяц назад

      @@breezymango4113 Because the US has more than 800 military bases all over the world and involved in almost all the significant conflicts in the last few decades. Hence, by sheer numbers, american bastards numbered the most and hence the most visible.

    • @TravelBabble93
      @TravelBabble93 Месяц назад +47

      @@breezymango4113because the video is about American GIs that’s why they’re mentioning Americans

    • @user-jg5ut9xj1e
      @user-jg5ut9xj1e Месяц назад +28

      @@breezymango4113 That's right. It's a Caucasian thing.

  • @WesNishi
    @WesNishi Месяц назад +67

    A famous actor in Japan Kusakari Masao was also half Japanese and half American. His Japanese mother kept him but faced prejudice and was otracized. He only found his American family last year by NHK.

    • @215neko
      @215neko Месяц назад +14

      Lots of people, including me, cried when watching that documentary last summer. It was emotional to see him meeting his family in the US for the first time.

    • @samuraijosh1595
      @samuraijosh1595 Месяц назад +7

      ​@@215nekoit doesn't make sense. Why does he feel emotional for the family that essentially occupied his country and possibly assaulted his mom into pregnancy?

    • @sgabig
      @sgabig Месяц назад

      Japan was an Axis power that started WWII they weren't victims

    • @WesNishi
      @WesNishi Месяц назад +8

      @@samuraijosh1595 How about actually watching the documentary and understanding what happened in this specific family?

    • @samuraijosh1595
      @samuraijosh1595 14 дней назад

      @@Mr.Byrnes are you sure it's not you?

  • @bobbyclemente21
    @bobbyclemente21 Месяц назад +93

    What's messed up about this, for those who would've liked to have lived in the U.S. who weren't adopted, is the Amerasian Homecoming Act excluded kids who were born in Japan and the Philippines. WHY?! Doesn't make any sense.

    • @f430ferrari5
      @f430ferrari5 Месяц назад +16

      It was more than those two countries. Laos, Cambodia, and Thailand also excluded and Korea.

    • @MsJonessss
      @MsJonessss Месяц назад +5

      Well it’s been done to blks in other countries.

    • @daniella8400
      @daniella8400 Месяц назад +4

      @@f430ferrari5all Asian country! Want a coincidence 🙄

  • @ivannevarez8478
    @ivannevarez8478 Месяц назад +59

    Roberto Duran the Famous boxer was the child of a former U.S. Marine stationed in Panama.

    • @BcksgotIQs
      @BcksgotIQs Месяц назад

      Yeah but he has a tribe unlike these bastards

    • @NativeTexMexican
      @NativeTexMexican Месяц назад +5

      I did not know that, Thanks for the info.

    • @lorddank1986
      @lorddank1986 27 дней назад +1

      Hands of stone one of my favorite boxers I believe his dad Margarito Duran was Mexican American

  • @larrye2679
    @larrye2679 Месяц назад +88

    My father was in the army and stationed in Japan during the occupation (1946 to about 1950). He was in his late teens and was a little on the wild side. Ive always wondered if he fathered any children while there. Is there somewhere where i could look into this?

    • @user-gk5rg4pq5x
      @user-gk5rg4pq5x Месяц назад +60

      Do your DNA on ancestry. They may be looking for you.

    • @user-jl2qr8ws1m
      @user-jl2qr8ws1m Месяц назад +26

      I think many people want to know their roots through DNA testing. However, it is not very common in Japan, and since thery are grew up in Japan, I don't know if there is anyone who can understand English after the analysis. I would like to look into it too for my mother.

    • @mrvgstyle2442
      @mrvgstyle2442 Месяц назад

      @@user-jl2qr8ws1m , The world is more globalized now. There is the possibility some of them are no longer in Japan so DNA testing is an option. Try Ancestry for the test. You may find cousins elsewhere in the world.

    • @truehappiness4U
      @truehappiness4U Месяц назад +19

      Many soldiers were famous for assaulting women as well. Of course these men won’t ever tell you if they assaulted women overseas. Curious if you can find relatives in Asia, and they can tell you their story about your father

    • @user-dl5lw4ht3k
      @user-dl5lw4ht3k Месяц назад +7

      if you can't go in person, contact a tourist consierge person, send photos, pay the employee well, you are hiring a private investigator.

  • @kolboy757
    @kolboy757 Месяц назад +17

    This report makes me choked up 😭

    • @rachelolanoff9323
      @rachelolanoff9323 21 день назад +1

      😢 still crying … so emotional but really admire the strength of the children and the people who supported them

  • @dancostello6465
    @dancostello6465 Месяц назад +51

    Good story about a loving Mama.

  • @newyorkcity76
    @newyorkcity76 Месяц назад +78

    It’s happen in every conflict

    • @MrOscarLong
      @MrOscarLong 23 дня назад +1

      Ratrely on the African and Middle East conflicts. I wonder why?

    • @marilynwillett804
      @marilynwillett804 3 дня назад

      @@MrOscarLong Because nobody is that desperate.

  • @joannebottcher9779
    @joannebottcher9779 Месяц назад +8

    God bless the Elizabeth Saunders home. We need to love people with no discrimination based on origin, language or skin colour.

  • @rachelcookie321
    @rachelcookie321 Месяц назад +14

    My great grandfather and great grandmother also met during the war but in Italy. My great grandfather was a British soldier stationed there and then he met a young Italian woman. My great auntie was born in Italy during the war then when all the soldiers were returning home, my great grandmother illegally immigrated with them. My Nana was born in England and grew up very English. My great grandmother never taught her daughters Italian despite the fact she could barely speak English, I think it was because she didn’t want people to perceive her daughters as foreigners. Unlike the Japanese children, my Nana and great auntie didn’t face problems due to race as both countries were European and my great grandfather never abandoned them so I think they were quite lucky. From my understanding, many Italians didn’t support the Italian government during the war, so I think the prejudice wouldn’t have been so bad hopefully.
    It’s crazy to think about how manny similar stories there probably are from across the globe. So many children abandoned by their military fathers. I live in New Zealand now and during the war there was American soldiers stationed here and many of them had relationships with kiwi women then abandoned them also. I hope all those children were able to find loving homes and grow up happy.

  • @geoffreyherrick298
    @geoffreyherrick298 Месяц назад +17

    The same thing happened during the Korean and Vietnam War. Heartbreaking. 😢

    • @sakinahameed
      @sakinahameed Месяц назад +2

      I wonder if same thing happened in Iraq and Afghanistan

  • @jomon723
    @jomon723 29 дней назад +5

    I think this happens now all over the world by many countries and I see it all the time here in Japan too

  • @g6686not
    @g6686not Месяц назад +18

    All the allied troops left babies behind during WW2. Americans, British, French, and Soviets.

    • @altang884884
      @altang884884 Месяц назад

      Shame upon all their houses

    • @ciara7172
      @ciara7172 Месяц назад +6

      What the Soviets did in Germany is very dark

    • @claudesantolini6335
      @claudesantolini6335 6 дней назад

      Why can't men, the evil part of humanity, control themselves like we do, otherwise we are literally left holding the baby . Shame on these animals.!!

  • @cymorrow49
    @cymorrow49 18 дней назад +3

    Son of black American and Japanese woman born early fifties. My mother left me with a Japanese family while she went to make a life/living in Hawaii. She did very well there I was told but I never saw her again. I was later adopted by black/japanese couple and went to live in USA. My ex,also hafu (b/J) spent a (very) short time in Oiso orphanage. Around 1967, the half black residents at the home were sent to Brazil. The authorities thought it was better for them there. There is an Ebony or Jet magazine about this forced emigration. I remember going to Brazil/Rio in early 2000’s and seeing faces similar to mine.

  • @aaat4873
    @aaat4873 Месяц назад +25

    9:25 Wow! Granny definitely had a type! She gave up one kid for adoption (or more), married an American man, and never tried to find out about the child she abandoned. I guess she never told her new family that she had another child! Quite impressive!

    • @israel6319
      @israel6319 Месяц назад

      These things happen because they became traumatic experiences for the mothers (some times). This happened to my Great grandma, and my family found out when my great aunt was looking for her.

    • @Afan-bm6hg
      @Afan-bm6hg Месяц назад +5

      She faced a lot of discrimination in Japan at the time. A lot of Asian women who had kids with American GI were treated badly at the time. It's easy for you to criticise when you know nothing.

    • @douglei4413
      @douglei4413 3 дня назад

      ​​@@Afan-bm6hghe's talking about the mother after she married an American man and came to America. She should have look for her abandoned child(s) after that.

  • @suginami0
    @suginami0 Месяц назад +16

    I used to work with Paul Iiyama in the 90s when he worked for a large Japanese food distributor.

    • @suginami0
      @suginami0 Месяц назад

      @@TTKDMS yes. JFC. I worked for a food company that sold to JFC. I met with Paul regularly.

  • @supernatural492
    @supernatural492 Месяц назад +13

    1. BOMBASTIC SIDE EYE
    2. On a more serious note, Mama Sanders had a big heart. Goodness bless every heart she touched. May her blessing reverberate for many generations.

  • @itzzion4774
    @itzzion4774 Месяц назад +4

    Crazy how this still happens

  • @ww21943
    @ww21943 26 дней назад +3

    Reminds me of the story of Junichiro Hill. The son of Cotton Hill and Michiko.

  • @marih3286
    @marih3286 9 дней назад +3

    This is a wonderful reminder that from an artistic perspective, black and white mix well with any color 😅.
    What a beautiful group of individuals!

  • @GrumpyYank26
    @GrumpyYank26 Месяц назад +9

    wonderful video. Thank you so much.

  • @arthurford829
    @arthurford829 Месяц назад +41

    Is there one of these videos on the mixed children of French soldiers and Vietnamese women?

    • @see-rious-ley
      @see-rious-ley Месяц назад +4

      Good point!

    • @s.p.8803
      @s.p.8803 Месяц назад +9

      Yes, they did one 4 months ago. How come you didn't see it then?

    • @stevens1041
      @stevens1041 Месяц назад +1

      I met one family like this, in Saigon. Thought it was fascinating, and indeed, they looked unique.

  • @nighle160
    @nighle160 Месяц назад +11

    Great report!

  • @orlanduhden5842
    @orlanduhden5842 2 дня назад

    Matsunaga Masae (my mom) was born on 8 October 1922 in Nagano-ken and was later to become a wonderful mother and a great cook. Everyone in our family raves about her cooking and misses her kindness. I miss her every day. Our family has many races and cultures. I am proud that family members do not suffer from racial, religious or cultural prejudices.

  • @Dangic23
    @Dangic23 Месяц назад +44

    GIs are still abandoning mothers and kids today.
    I live near Yokota and this happens often.

    • @see-rious-ley
      @see-rious-ley Месяц назад +2

      Then why do the women still get with them if this is seen all around already?!??? There are condoms and birth control methods NOW too!!!

    • @ellebrook3413
      @ellebrook3413 Месяц назад +1

      The children are always the victims whether it's being abandoned by a GI, or being abducted by the Japanese spouse and denied access to their kids because the country's laws regarding joint custody change far too glacially.

    • @see-rious-ley
      @see-rious-ley Месяц назад +1

      @@Dangic23 if it happens so often then that’s on the women who allow for this to happen. There are such things as birth control methods out there, right? Or am I close?

  • @alexcarter8807
    @alexcarter8807 Месяц назад +33

    To say Japanese society is insular is a vast understatement. Look up RUclipsr "Ask Shogo" he's got some heartrending episodes about how badly he was treated in Japan as a 100% Japanese who merely spent *some* years of his childhood in the US.

    • @Der.Geschichtenerzahler
      @Der.Geschichtenerzahler Месяц назад +3

      I watched that video too. Unfortunately bulling is very common in Japan, and the authorities don't seem to care much about it.

  • @morenowg
    @morenowg Месяц назад +2

    God bless these humans go have had to deal with that abandonment.

  • @aeromtb2468
    @aeromtb2468 Месяц назад +35

    what about the french soldiers kids in north africa and SE asia.

    • @s.p.8803
      @s.p.8803 Месяц назад

      They coveved that already. How come you didn't see them?

    • @ellebrook3413
      @ellebrook3413 Месяц назад +4

      maybe a French language media outlet could produce something, or if you feel strongly about it yourself, you could set up a social media link to highlight it?

  • @miguelangelrodriguez8999
    @miguelangelrodriguez8999 Месяц назад +4

    Great report. Thank you

  • @TurkishMusashi89
    @TurkishMusashi89 Месяц назад +58

    Racisme is unfortunaly everywhere in the world also in Japan. The world is not a perfect place. We are all humans with red blood

    • @kapawtaw
      @kapawtaw Месяц назад

      Racism is the worst in china, Japan and Korea.

    • @n.g.l.
      @n.g.l. Месяц назад +1

      Xenophobia is the issue. Some ostracize white people too because they're all about being Japanese. Some places won't allow you in unless you're Japanese. Even if you're Japanese and you dye your hair pink some will look at you sideways. Race is an American social construct, everywhere else is class, tribe, ethnicity. In my paternal country it's tribe and sad to say the ruling party has the nice gadgets, the most money and enriches their people even though we're from the same country.

    • @slevinlindsay3624
      @slevinlindsay3624 Месяц назад +8

      I'm sure there was strong dislike and hostility towards yank-looking people in Japan at that time after Japan got obliterated by them, especially the cities that had the atomic bombs dropped on them. The native people needed to understand that those mixed Japanese children were also a victim and product of the yank hegemony and occupation.

    • @Anthony-dy5cq
      @Anthony-dy5cq Месяц назад +5

      Yea? No. It's most certainly a response mechanism from the subjects of racism. Oh! And there's that little tidbit of Americans having blown up their country, twice.

    • @n.g.l.
      @n.g.l. Месяц назад +2

      @@Anthony-dy5cq idk why Americans forget that 😭. Generational trauma from the event

  • @Paul-H-Wolfram6608
    @Paul-H-Wolfram6608 Месяц назад +10

    Same as during the Vietnam war, many Vietnamese women were pregnant by American soldiers.

  • @NC-qc7wd
    @NC-qc7wd День назад

    That Tony is a hunk, what a stunning man. This is a great story and recovered history.

  • @WildDisaster
    @WildDisaster 3 дня назад

    The coldest heart belongs to a man who abandoned a pregnant woman with his child.

  • @stephengibbs4372
    @stephengibbs4372 Месяц назад +4

    They are not orphans have both parents dead, these are abandoned children whose mothers were spurned by there families and society.

  • @veronikalynn5084
    @veronikalynn5084 3 дня назад

    I feel for the man that discovered his mother had immigrated to the US. To finally see her face and know her name, but to not be able to ever speak…so painful.
    I don’t share the exact circumstance, but similar in a way. My father died this year. I never got the chance to speak to him as an adult - last time was only for a few minutes, around age 11.
    I’ll always feel the pain.

  • @rubbersoul3723
    @rubbersoul3723 Месяц назад +4

    American watching from the State of Rhode Island in the U.S.-wow great/interesting story guys-never knew of it before-always great content guys-Peace.

  • @Kbrjp-kx8sl
    @Kbrjp-kx8sl Месяц назад +1

    I’m Brazilian and my father was a Japanese who immigrated to Brazil after 1960 just post war years. He told me that the Japanese children born from the Black soldiers and Japanese women were sent abroad for adoption because at that time the Japanese society would not accept them in Japan. There are many mixed children left behind In Okinawa by the American soldiers. I went there and I saw some “hafu” or half which means mixed kids in Japan. They look mixed but they’re Japanese. The governor of Okinawa is one.

  • @desihiggins4229
    @desihiggins4229 Месяц назад +2

    The same thing happened with my father in Australia, his father was a US soldier and left my grandmother.

    • @rachelledellavecchia4951
      @rachelledellavecchia4951 8 дней назад

      Yeah my Great Grandmother said it was known not to accept coke from the GIs as they would drug it and date "assult" the Aussie girls forcing them into relationships.

  • @user-kw5hx7ji8h
    @user-kw5hx7ji8h 4 дня назад +1

    God bless abandoned children everywhere.

  • @nabeelaasherthv8854
    @nabeelaasherthv8854 Месяц назад +5

    Mixed race children are so beautiful and special, they should be proud and reap the benefits of belonging to two diverse cultures.

    • @user-fx5sw1cn7j
      @user-fx5sw1cn7j Месяц назад +1

      they look creepy, and neither culture will accept them

  • @darreldavis3551
    @darreldavis3551 11 дней назад +1

    Now do a video of all the abandoned children French soldiers left around the world.

  • @DrYou-Mbbs_edu
    @DrYou-Mbbs_edu Месяц назад +8

    Same happened with German soldiers and French women bearing their children..public humiliation was quite common for those women

    • @davanmani556
      @davanmani556 Месяц назад +2

      Italians, Greek, eastern bloc and Jews.

    • @BcksgotIQs
      @BcksgotIQs Месяц назад

      Not the same thing
      There all white/ European stock
      These mixed race bastards are not

    • @NadiaGirl1
      @NadiaGirl1 Месяц назад

      Don’t forget that the towns would grab the women when the ally’s came in and save their heads and rip their clothing for being with the Germans they would also be banished even with their children.
      The thing is some of these women were forced and it had to for necessity

  • @azariahisrael5632
    @azariahisrael5632 День назад

    They need to make a movie about that lady who started the school and home for thr orphans.

  • @roroteam8395
    @roroteam8395 27 дней назад +2

    Im black and Vietnamese i never met my black dad or the black side of my family iv never met anyone actually dont need them then definitely dont need them now I move to America and shock the world. And yes black people and Asians were racist AF towards me when i was young my adopted parents were white also.

  • @maxstein2011
    @maxstein2011 Месяц назад +3

    The aftermath of war… 😞

  • @MrHitotsumusha
    @MrHitotsumusha Месяц назад

    Interesting and compelling.

  • @stevenrichards1539
    @stevenrichards1539 Месяц назад +18

    When stationed in Korea our unit sponsored an orphanage; and of the 400 kids living there not a single one was fathered by a GI, yet embedded Korean soldiers refused to aid in any tasks for the orphanage: their reason these are mixed kids.

    • @seycheles27
      @seycheles27 Месяц назад +1

      Koreans are more racist then Japanese

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Месяц назад

      Blood puritism exist.
      It’s sadly an Asian belief

    • @Jacqueline-xb5nk
      @Jacqueline-xb5nk 23 дня назад

      Heartbreaking

  • @alwayschillingx
    @alwayschillingx Месяц назад +50

    And UK soldiers are doing this in Kenya

    • @natak.2287
      @natak.2287 Месяц назад +3

      .. Meeting local women?

    • @MsJonessss
      @MsJonessss Месяц назад +7

      Exactly. Those poor woman and children are kicked out of their village.

    • @natak.2287
      @natak.2287 Месяц назад +4

      @@MsJonessss nope

    • @davanmani556
      @davanmani556 Месяц назад

      @@natak.2287quit lyinh

    • @tracy6648
      @tracy6648 Месяц назад

      ​@@natak.2287 ?

  • @87yugo74
    @87yugo74 Месяц назад +1

    I am lost for words.

  • @ernestestrada2461
    @ernestestrada2461 День назад

    My mother married an American GI and I knew my Japanese family growing up. My mother believed that with the discriminatory attitude in Japan that it wasn't important for me to learn and to read and write Japanese.
    But I am fluent in speaking the language and I study the written language periodically on the side.
    And I discover new things about the language as I look into the entomology of the characters and understanding the cultural nuances having grown up in Japan.
    But as many half or hafu will tell you, you are accepted to a but never fully by the society at large.
    Although you may speak the language and understand the cultural context and nuances, The prevailing attitude is that of the Japanese people are a race and look a certain way.

  • @refosco1993
    @refosco1993 Месяц назад +13

    Beautiful people

    • @KosherFinance
      @KosherFinance Месяц назад +1

      No.

    • @refosco1993
      @refosco1993 Месяц назад

      @@KosherFinance Why?

    • @KosherFinance
      @KosherFinance Месяц назад +1

      @@refosco1993 not pure

    • @refosco1993
      @refosco1993 Месяц назад

      @@KosherFinance wow you seem like a wonderful person…. You are talking to a gay person fyi, I hope you don’t catch it!

  • @fredferd965
    @fredferd965 Месяц назад +2

    We cannot be judged for the sins of others, nor for what our ancestors have done. Only for our own acts are we responsible, our acts, and whatever influence we may have on the affairs of the world. Having said that, I wish to God that our people had done better than this. This is pain that rips through the center of childrens' hearts and souls. I pray to whatever gods there are that I may never, ever, cause suffering like this...

  • @deejay4837
    @deejay4837 Месяц назад +2

    It must've been hard growing up for them as children.

  • @DavidDavidunderthebridgeChampi
    @DavidDavidunderthebridgeChampi Месяц назад +6

    The same thing happened in Australia, England and more with mixed race children. Today, they can use Familial Genetic Search.

  • @jamesdewer
    @jamesdewer 3 дня назад

    Mom's Taiwanese and my dad was from Massachusetts. They got married in the early '60s when my dad was in San Francisco and met my mom. She was fortunate enough to become American and be born here, but nevertheless, my father was a GI heading off to Vietnam. Who was still an odd mix at the time

  • @Merukun6
    @Merukun6 25 дней назад +1

    The British Commonwealth Occupation Force (BCOF) was assigned to Japan from 1945 to 1952. It was composed of soldiers & sailors from UzK, Australia, New Zealand, and India. At one point 40,000 Commonwealth troops could be found in southern Japan demobilizing military industries.
    By 1948, BCOF was primarily Australian units. Fraternization with Japanese women was more restricted than with US troops, but a number of Aussies married Japanese women and published books about their relationships. Undoubtedly there were also “Hafu” children born to unmarried Japanese mothers in southern Honshu & Shikoku where BCOFwas quartered.

  • @kjmax1068
    @kjmax1068 Месяц назад +23

    I would love to find my Japanese cousin. We know his name but not sure how to find him. Our uncle was with J Force from NZ.

    • @aish125
      @aish125 Месяц назад +8

      Random Japanese here. There are many Japanese people who were born to American father but cannot find the father. If your cousin is in Okinawa, a comment on web article (by an Okinawa woman who is searching American father) advised her where to contact.

    • @eyeswideopen7777
      @eyeswideopen7777 Месяц назад +4

      Do a DNA test that might link you to a relative.. 23andme

    • @WesNishi
      @WesNishi Месяц назад +3

      ​@@eyeswideopen7777DNA kits are not popular in Japan so likely wont get any targets

  • @alfZbarkada
    @alfZbarkada Месяц назад +1

    Please make a movie about this please 🙏

  • @RUHappyATM
    @RUHappyATM 13 дней назад +1

    Do a video on children born to German soldiers in the occupied territories.

  • @ray24051
    @ray24051 Месяц назад +10

    Crazy that these children born from US GI's from World War II are in their '80s now.

  • @vondahe
    @vondahe Месяц назад +4

    It pains me so much to be reminded of the ignorance and narrow-mindedness of some people.
    There are indeed different cultures, different countries, languages, religions, mindsets and personalities but there is only ONE HUMAN RACE and we’re all part of it, regardless of pigmentation!
    Treat others the same way you want to be treated.

  • @Fuzzle1985
    @Fuzzle1985 Месяц назад +6

    JFC that Japanese guy is 60 and looks two decades younger than the American two. 🤣

  • @curtisgeorge1969
    @curtisgeorge1969 Месяц назад +7

    Fast forward to what's happening today. When a Japanese spouse abducts their child from the foreign spouse. I'm an American and I recently had this happen to me with my daughter. I did not abandon my child and love her very much. Her mother had taken my daughter and cut communications after empting our bank account in Japan. I was forced to leave Japan. I have not seen my daughter for 2 months. She is 9 months old now.

    • @joshi3518
      @joshi3518 Месяц назад +1

      Sorry that can be a serious complication I think if you keep reaching out and get help to do it like some siblings or friends you can push through.

    • @user-fx5sw1cn7j
      @user-fx5sw1cn7j Месяц назад +1

      waito piggu go homu!

  • @angelmatos9143
    @angelmatos9143 Месяц назад +7

    When will we realize, "One Race, the Human race'. 😇

    • @scotthearts9634
      @scotthearts9634 Месяц назад

      Oh boy, it's gonna take some time to get there a realllllllllly long time to get there. I do truly want that 😢

    • @user-fx5sw1cn7j
      @user-fx5sw1cn7j Месяц назад +1

      japan doesn't accept DEI bullsht

  • @rightforme
    @rightforme 28 дней назад

    My grandfather brought my grandmother back to the us. I remember being told when my dad decided to marry my mom that his parents werent happy about her being half japanese at first.

  • @marilynwillett804
    @marilynwillett804 3 дня назад

    Not WW2 perhaps yrs later. my father fought hand to hand combat against the Japanese in New Guinea, alongside our allies the Australians, he suffered greatly in that jungle because the enemies jump on you even if they are two on one. He got malaria, but never complained, went right to work, married mom and gave us a good childhood in the 50's, he died at 52, 100% war connected.

  • @SL16867
    @SL16867 Месяц назад +15

    Soldiers and abandoning children overseas. Name a more iconic duo!

    • @sky-pv7ff
      @sky-pv7ff Месяц назад

      Well the females are to be blamed too. As they can't keep their legs closed.

  • @elchicano187
    @elchicano187 Месяц назад +5

    We are all mixed , nobody is pure

  • @Funica11
    @Funica11 Месяц назад +7

    Only registered in the US consulate in Japan. There were antimiscegenation laws in the US, they could not get marriage licenses, and they were practically just sex slaves.

  • @PHN-2024
    @PHN-2024 27 дней назад +2

    The United States Military should add this Slogan to their Brand: “Have Sperm Will Travel”.

  • @AlanM22
    @AlanM22 Месяц назад +2

    Wow he doesn’t look 61 to be fair

  • @paulforder591
    @paulforder591 Месяц назад +11

    Nice to see a happy school of Amerasian children in Okinawa. 75% of US armed forces are stationed there, so mixed relationships between soldiers & local women, then as now, are not uncommon. 😺

  • @silentblackhole
    @silentblackhole День назад

    For what it's worth, I just want to say that these children are worth just as much as anyone others born to any other people. Don't worry about certain. cultures, opinions or values. on who your parents are. I find the concept silly. What wasn't see, though, is the way that these kids were treated. What a terrible way. to be judged as a child through no. through no design or fault of your own. I've travelled throughout the world. and some of the best people I have met have been from America and Japan, so I can imagine any child. from both of those worlds would be pretty awesome! I hope somebody in this situation reads this comment :)

  • @davidcaudill7779
    @davidcaudill7779 Месяц назад +3

    I tell you what that woman called Mom I cannot pronounce the rest of it sounds like a woman of Great character

  • @BlahBlah-em2ed
    @BlahBlah-em2ed Месяц назад

    Fortunately this tragic story was not repeated in Afghanistan or Iraq.

  • @danielvilla573
    @danielvilla573 Месяц назад +4

    I'm not crying!!! I'm doing face exercises godamn it!

  • @orangeninja912
    @orangeninja912 Месяц назад +33

    Bareback is a sweet taboo. The military should teach their boys to wear a jimmy. Saves everyone a lot of trouble

    • @sky-pv7ff
      @sky-pv7ff Месяц назад

      Well the japanese females should keep their legs closed.

    • @bobbyclemente21
      @bobbyclemente21 Месяц назад +10

      Sounds great in theory, but as you know there are tons of single mothers EVERYWHERE, not just in places where soldiers are stationed.

    • @see-rious-ley
      @see-rious-ley Месяц назад +1

      Disgusting soldiers is what this all means. And those local women - unless they were forced into prostitution - had no reason to be allowing for any bareback activities themselves!!! These women knew what they were doing.

    • @zacharykennedy3848
      @zacharykennedy3848 Месяц назад +5

      We learn it at basic. Most just don’t care 😂

    • @ErikPT
      @ErikPT Месяц назад

      @@zacharykennedy3848especially if you’re Catholic we don’t use protection

  • @Stranger_Than_Fiction299
    @Stranger_Than_Fiction299 18 часов назад

    I dont understand why a dying culture would refuse to embrace its future. If Japan embraced those who are half Japanese, they could keep thier culture from dying out completely and have a more open and accepting culture for all to live in.