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After the war, General Douglas MacArthur ordered Fuchida to testify during war trials in Tokyo. Fuchida took a cynical view towards the trials because he believed that Americans—like the Japanese—had committed atrocities against their captives. But his former flight engineer, who had been a prisoner of war, told Fuchida that the Americans had treated him humanely. Even more, he learned of a woman who had ministered lovingly to Japanese prisoners: Peggy Covell.
Covell’s parents had been missionaries to Japan and were captured and killed by Japanese soldiers in 1943. Before the Japanese beheaded them, the Covells asked for 30 minutes //in which to pray—in part, their daughter believed, for God to forgive those //who were about to execute them.
Fuchida was astonished at the idea //that anyone would forgive their enemies—or worship a God //who would not, or could not, save their lives. Why, he wondered, would the Covells’s daughter return to Japan to help POWs?
Fuchida found his answer in 1948. At a Tokyo train station, an American missionary was handing out pamphlets titled, “I was a Prisoner of Japan.” It was written by Jacob DeShazer, one of General Doolittle’s Raiders //who bombed Tokyo in 1942 in retaliation for Pearl Harbor. As James Nathanial Miller writes in The Liberty Beacon, DeShazer had been “extremely vocal” about his hatred of the Japanese, “declaring that if he could only get his hands on the guy who had led the raid on Pearl Harbor, he would slit his throat.”
As it turned out, it was the Japanese //who got their hands on DeShazer when his B-25 crashed in China after the raid. For the next 40 months, DeShazer was starved, tortured, beaten, and kept in solitary confinement—all of which increased his hatred for the Japanese.
But then a guard gave him an English Bible. As DeShazer read, he joyfully surrendered his heart to Christ, and began treating his captors with respect, love, and forgiveness instead of belligerence.
After the war, DeShazer returned to the U.S., trained as a missionary, and returned to Japan to share the love of Christ with his former enemies. It’s estimated that some 30,000 Japanese citizens became Christians because of his ministry—including Mitsuo Fuchida—the leader of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
In 1950, Fuchida sought out DeShazer. The two former enemies embraced each other as brothers and spent the rest of their lives /witnessing together to the power of Christ and of the need to forgive.
So today, tell your children the story of Pearl Harbor. But also tell them the story of Mitsuo Fuchida and Jacob DeShazer. Because theirs is a lesson () our country sorely needs today.