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曹洞宗・北海道管区内の研修で講演を行いました。

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令和6年11月22日 札幌パー... 令和6年11月22日 札幌パークホテルにて 返還前の実物日章旗を掲示 返還前の実物日章旗を掲示 聴衆は曹洞宗の寺院関係者と婦人... 聴衆は曹洞宗の寺院関係者と婦人会の皆様 OBONソサエティ作成のビデオ... OBONソサエティ作成のビデオシリーズ「秘話」から米国側の提供者の声を放映 講演後には質問も頂きました。 講演後には質問も頂きました。
捜索班の工藤です。令和6年11月22日に「曹洞宗」の北海道管区内の婦人会研修会にて講演をさせて頂きました。聴衆は皆さま所謂お坊さんでした。

昨年の7月に北海道松前町にて行った【鈴木秀二命日章旗返還式】に参列頂いた同町【法幢時】の御住職より「研修会の講師として日章旗返還活動についてお話して欲しい」とご縁を頂きました。約50名ほどのお坊さんを前に90分間、OBONの活動について、「寄せ書き日の丸」について、遺霊品の返還を依頼される米国側の想いなど、動画と写真を使いお話致しました。

実際の日章旗を皆様に見て頂いたり、北海道で行われた捜索、返還についてお話すると皆様身を乗り出して関心を示されていました。
 
日章旗の返還を通したくさんのご縁を頂き、とても感謝しております。
より多くの方々にこの活動を知って頂き、そして一枚でも多く、一日でも早く遺霊品の返還をして行きたいと強く思いました。
#army #flagreturn #japanesflag #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #仏教 #北海道 #大東亜戦争 #寄せ書き日の丸 #日章旗返還 #曹洞宗 #講演 #靖国神社

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【朝日新聞】宇治田原の堀口さんの「寄せ書き日の丸」 米国から80年ぶり返還/ "The 'Yosegaki Hinomaru' by Horiguchi from Ujitawara Returned from the U.S. After 80 Yea

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【朝日新聞】宇治田原の堀口さん... 【朝日新聞】宇治田原の堀口さん... 【朝日新聞】宇治田原の堀口さん...
 【京都】田原村(いまの宇治田原町)の堀口秋夫さんは太平洋戦争中の1944年12月8日、フィリピン・レイテ島で亡くなった。米兵が戦利品として米国に持ちさった堀口さんの「寄せ書き日の丸」が、返還活動をしている米国の団体から遺族のもとに80年ぶりに帰ってきた。
 
 秋夫さんのめい堀口あや子さん(76)と、あや子さんのいとこ松本健治さん(74)が宇治田原町役場で24日にあった返還式に出席し、秋夫さんが田原村から持っていった日の丸を受けとった。
 
 遺族の2人によると、日の丸には近所の69人の名前があるものの、当時を知る人は亡くなっているため、秋夫さんのことでわかっていることは少ない。それでも、あや子さんの父が弟の早世を生涯悔やんでいたことや、もしものことがあれば家族が不幸になると考えて秋夫さんは独身のままだったといった記憶が親戚のあいだに残っている。
 
 松本さんは式典で「不幸な歴史の教訓をけっして忘れず、平和の尊さを訴えたい」と話した。取材には「80年たって初めて秋夫さんが家に帰ってきました。言いようのない思いがあります」と答えた。
 
 遺留品の返還活動を2009年にはじめた米国オレゴン州の非営利団体OBON(オボン)ソサエティ(レックス・ジークさんと敬子・ジークさん夫婦が代表)から頼まれて、府遺族会が宇治田原町の遺族を突きとめた。
 
#army #flagreturn #friendship #japanesflag #missouri #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #reconciliation #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #京都府 #大東亜戦争 #寄せ書き日の丸 #日章旗返還 #靖国神社

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【洛タイ新報】80年の時を経て。。/"Returned to the Families of War Dead After 80 Years"

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【洛タイ新報】80年の時を経て... 【洛タイ新報】80年の時を経て...
#army #flagreturn #friendship #japanesflag #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #soldier #ussmissouri #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #京都府 #大東亜戦争 #寄せ書き日の丸 #日章旗返還 #靖国神社

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【NHK-WORLD】WWII Japanese flags given to group for return to soldiers' families

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【NHK-WORLD】WWII...
WWII Japanese flags given to group for return to soldiers' families
Three Japanese flags kept at the Battleship Missouri Memorial in Hawaii have been donated to a group working to return World War Two relics to families of Japanese servicemen.
The flags were entrusted to the memorial at Pearl Harbor by former US servicemen and their families. A ceremony to transfer the flags to the OBON SOCIETY, a US based organization that returns war relics to families, was held at the memorial on Thursday.
The Japanese flags were inscribed with signatures and messages by family and friends, then given to departing servicemen. Men carried such flags into battle as good luck amulets.
The president of the Battleship Missouri Memorial, Michael Carr, referred to next year as the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two.
Carr said, "This flag transfer becomes a symbol of our continued commitment to ensuring that the lessons of World War Two are never forgotten, that we strive for a future built on peace, mutual respect and understanding."
The co-founder of OBON SOCIETY, Rex Ziak, said: "This is the ship that's going around the world as the vessel that brought Japan to its knees." He went on to say, "now their thoughts have changed their feelings, and it is a simple unconditional friendship, the unconditional peace between US and Japan."
 
#army #closure #flagreturn #friendship #japanesflag #missouri #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #peace #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #大東亜戦争 #寄せ書き日の丸 #日章旗返還 #靖国神社

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【NHK・動画】戦艦ミズーリ記念館の日章旗 米の団体に引き渡し 持ち主調査へ/Japanese flag at Battleship Missouri Memorial Museum handed over to U.S. organization to investigate its owner.

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https://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/h... https://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/html/20241004/k10014601081000.html?fbclid=IwY2xjawF-ZK5leHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHZFIPK6AhqgItNJ1HylCkVxEwDu8_kkLMqtf1S8_otCZWBN56P62gOVH4g_aem_ryN9H2A0_FhuHq_2XRkjyw
来年で第2次世界大戦の終結から80年となるのを前に、アメリカ ハワイの戦艦ミズーリ記念館に所蔵されていた日章旗3枚が3日、遺族に日章旗などを返還する活動をしている団体に引き渡されました。
 
 
引き渡されたのは、ハワイの戦艦ミズーリ記念館に所蔵されてきた寄せ書き入りの3枚の日章旗です。
日章旗は3日、遺族に戦時中の日章旗などを返還する活動をしているアメリカの非営利団体「OBONソサエティ」の関係者に手渡されました。
 
このうち戦艦ミズーリの元乗組員が持っていたという旗には「三原青年団」や「黒岩泉君」と読める名前などが記されています。
 
別の旗には「祝入団 関野勇君」と読める名前が書かれています。
 
戦艦ミズーリ記念館のマイケル・カー館長は「第2次世界大戦の教訓を忘れず、平和に基づく未来を目指すための取り組みを続ける決意の象徴となる」としています。
 
「OBONソサエティ」のレックス・ジークさんは「旗が寄贈されたことは無条件の平和と友情の証となった」と話し、今後、旗の持ち主について調査を進めたいとしています。
 
#army #closure #flagreturn #friendship #japanesflag #missouri #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #peace #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #大東亜戦争 #寄せ書き日の丸 #日章旗返還 #靖国神社

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【BSS山陰放送】ー戦争に引き裂かれた親子 息子が生まれた日に出征し満州で戦死した父親…初めての遺品が約80年の時をこえて息子に返還ー"A Father Who Died in Battle in Manchuria ... His First Keepsake''

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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iWkAKe1YP5c
【BSS山陰放送】令和6年8月25日に鳥取県日南の日南町役場で執り行われました「火山行一命日章旗返還」について「BSS山陰放送が」番組を放送して下さいました。
 

ー戦争に引き裂かれた親子 息子が生まれた日に出征し満州で戦死した父親…初めての遺品が約80年の時をこえて息子に返還ー
#army #closure #flagreturn #japanesflag #japanflag #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #peace #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #大東亜戦争 #日章旗返還 #靖国神社

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【日南町広報誌】「火山行一命日章旗返還」

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【日南町広報誌】「火山行一命日...
令和6年8月25日鳥取県日野郡日南町にて執り行われました「火山行一命日章旗返還」につきまして日南町の広報誌に記事が掲載されました。
#army #closure #flagreturn #japanesflag #mediacoverage #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #peace #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #大東亜戦争 #日章旗返還 #護国神社 #靖国神社

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【Smithsonian Magazine】A Japanese Soldier’s Son Receives a Memento of His Father, Who Was Killed During World War II

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After inheriting the flag from h... After inheriting the flag from his grandfather, Scott Stein decided to return it to the descendants of its original owner. Tsukasa Hiyama, who is holdi... Tsukasa Hiyama, who is holding the flag, poses with his family and community members during the return ceremony. Tsukasa Hiyama unfurls the fl... Tsukasa Hiyama unfurls the flag at his mother's grave.
A Japanese Soldier’s Son Receives a Memento of His Father, Who Was Killed During World War II

The so-called good-luck flag, which hung on an American veteran’s wall for many years, returned home last month after nearly eight decades
 
On the day Asae Hiyama gave birth to a son, her husband left to serve in the Imperial Japanese Army.
 
It was the summer of 1943, and the young couple had been married for a year. Asae waited dutifully until 1945, when she learned that her husband, Yukikazu Hiyama, had died in China. Officials said that he had been killed in combat, but Asae never received his remains or any of his possessions.
 
Without any material confirmation of Yukikazu’s death, Asae felt as if he had vanished. Their son, Tsukasa Hiyama, grew up knowing very little about his father, though he thought of him often.
 
“Since childhood, I often imagined what my father was like,” Tsukasa, now 81, tells the Washington Post’s Cathy Free. “What kind of person was he? What did he smell like?”
 
These questions lingered, but Tsukasa received few answers. He and his mother rarely spoke about Yukikazu. At the same time, Asae seemed to believe that he might one day walk through the door. Up until her death in 2000, she never received the closure she needed.
 
Then, in April, Tsukasa got a phone call. Researchers had identified a Japanese flag that had belonged to Yukikazu. They had been working for years to track down Tsukasa, who had never possessed a memento of his father.
 

During World War II, many Japanese soldiers carried good-luck flags, which featured handwritten well wishes from friends and loved ones. They varied in size but were usually small enough for their owners to fold up and wear inside their uniforms. They also happened to be an item that Allied soldiers collected as battlefield souvenirs.
 
One of those soldiers was Bernard Stein, who served in the Philippines with the United States Army’s 38th Infantry Division. When he returned from the Pacific, he brought Yukikazu’s flag home with him and hung it up in his den.
 
“He never talked about his wartime experiences,” Bernard’s grandson, Scott Stein, tells Stars and Stripes’ Seth Robson and Hana Kusumoto. “He must have seen some intense stuff in the war, but there were no mental health things when he returned. He just kept it bottled up.”
 
Scott has distinct memories of seeing the flag on the wall as a small child. He wondered where it came from, but like Tsukasa, he rarely asked about such matters. Still, he sensed that the flag was important to his grandfather.
 
“I would stare at it in fascination,” Scott tells Fox 5 New York’s Jennifer Williams. “My grandfather told me one day that it would be mine.”
 
When Bernard died, Scott inherited the flag, which he initially hung on his own wall. Eventually, however, he took the war souvenir down and stored it away. “I started to realize a while back that maybe it wasn’t the best home decor,” he tells the Post. As time passed, he also realized that he didn’t want to pass the flag down to the next generation. Instead, he wanted to send it home.
 
Around 2017, Scott learned about the OBON Society, an Oregon-based organization that works to return missing good-luck flags and other belongings to the families of Japanese soldiers. Since it launched in 2009, the group has identified the rightful owners of more than 600 flags.
 
When the researchers received Scott’s flag, they spotted numerous clues: Yukikazu’s full name is written on it, as are the names of his well-wishers. Still, it took them a long time to find Tsukasa, who lives in Tottori, Japan’s least populous prefecture. He has no siblings, as his mother never had any other children.
 
“She never remarried because she never believed her husband was dead,” Rex Ziak, the OBON Society’s president and co-founder, tells Smithsonian magazine. “She always expected him to come home to her and held that hope until her final breath.”
 
At a ceremony last month, Tsukasa accepted his father’s flag. He invited dozens of friends, family and community members to witness the return. Some of them had their own connections to the artifact, as their ancestors’ names are featured on it, too.
 
“The return of my father’s flag has brought a significant sense of closure,” Tsukasa tells the Post. “When I held the flag in my hands, it felt as if I could sense my father’s warmth for the first time.”
 
He also brought the flag to his mother’s gravesite, where he unfurled it as his wife and family looked on. After all these years, a memento of Asae’s husband had finally come home.
#army #closure #flagreturn #japanesflag #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #大東亜戦争 #寄せ書き日の丸 #日章旗返還 #靖国神社 #鳥取県

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【滋賀県】滋賀県三日月知事が定例記者会見

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【滋賀県】滋賀県三日月知事が定...
滋賀県三日月知事が定例記者会見にて訪米視察時にOBONソサエティ本部を訪問された時のことをお話しされています。

ーーOBONソサエティとの交流、これはもちろん滋賀県だけにとどまるものではありませんが、戦争遺留品を返還する活動をしていただいている、させていただいていることを、ぜひ今後さらに促進させていくために、さらにどういったことをしなければならないのかなというような有意義な意見交換をすることができました。この日だけでも数点、レックスさん御夫妻のもとに全米から寄せ書き・日の丸等が届けられる。多い時だと、年間数百点届けられるものをどのように還していこうかと、御本人を特定して、御遺族の御理解を得てと、ここにはやはり米国各州のそして国内各都道府県の協力が重要なのではないかと、こういったことで一致をいたしまして、今後、全国知事会などでもこういった取組についてさらに理解が広がるように努めていきたいということをこの場で表明させていただきましたので、そういったことに繋げていきたいと考えております。ーー
#army #closure #flagreturn #japanesflag #japanflag #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #peace #soldier #ww2 #yosegakihinomaru #大東亜戦争 #寄せ書き日の丸 #日章旗返還 #滋賀県 #靖国神社

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【STARS AND STRIPES】Sole memento: American vet’s grandson returns WWII souvenir to Japanese son

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Scott Stein and his son, Nichola... Scott Stein and his son, Nicholas, pose with a Japanese flag his grandfather, Bernard Stein, brought home after serving in the Philippines during World War II. The late Bernard Stein, center,... The late Bernard Stein, center, fought in the Philippines during World War II as a member of the 38th Infantry Division. This flag, brought to America ... This flag, brought to America by a U.S.soldier who served in the Philippines during the World War II, has been returned to the original owner's family members in Japan.
TOKYO — A Japanese flag, brought to America by a U.S. soldier who served in the Philippines during World War II, has returned home.
 
The signature-covered flag was taken as a war trophy by the late Bernard Stein, who fought in the Philippines as a member of the U.S. Army’s 38th Infantry Division, known as the Avengers of Bataan. The division landed on the main island of Luzon in January 1945 and helped liberate the Bataan Peninsula and secure Manila Bay.
 
Almost eight decades later, the veteran’s grandson, Scott Stein, an artists’ agent in New York City, sent the banner back to Japan so it could be given to relatives of the fallen Japanese soldier who carried it into battle.
 
It was presented to the family on Sunday during a ceremony in a town in southwestern Honshu, the largest of Japan’s four main islands. The late Bernard Stein, center, fought in the Philippines during World War II as a member of the 38th Infantry Division. (Scott Stein)
 
Many Japanese soldiers carried their country’s flags inscribed with names and messages from family and friends for good luck. Stein inherited the flag from his grandfather, who became a building inspector in Nassau County, N.Y., after the war and died two decades ago, he told Stars and Stripes during an Aug. 8 video call from New York.
 
As a youngster, he was fascinated by the banner and a Japanese sword at his grandfather’s home, but he didn’t know how they got there. “He never talked about his wartime experiences,” Stein said. “He must have seen some intense stuff in the war, but there were no mental health things when he returned. He just kept it bottled up.” Stein had no plans to hand the flag down to his own son. It was time for it to return home, “especially for the family that might not have any remnant of their lost loved one,” he said.
 
The search for the flag’s original owner began in 2017, when Stein sought help restoring the item. A friend Stein asked about fabric restoration told him about the Obon Society.
 
The nonprofit group helps veterans and their families return old war trophies like flags and swords. Japanese researchers helped the society trace some of the 50 signatures on the flag to Tottori prefecture, Keiko Ziak, founder of the Obon Society, said during the video call. It turned out that the soldier who carried the flag into battle, Yukikazu Hiyama, was born in Nichinan town on Feb. 15, 1922. He served as a corporal with the 1st Independent Tank Brigade and died in China on Aug. 17, 1945.
 
It was the first lost WWII flag returned to Tottori prefecture, Ziak said. It wasn’t only the fallen Japanese soldier’s family who was excited about the flag’s return, she said. This flag, brought to America by a U.S.soldier who served in the Philippines during the World War II, has been returned to the original owner's family members in Japan. (Scott Stein)
 
“The flag includes the names of many members of the community and people recognize their grandfathers’ or fathers’ names on it,” she said. The flag was given back to the fallen soldier’s son, Tsukasa Hiyama, 81. “I appreciate that Mr. Stein, who had the flag, returned it,” he said by phone Monday. “I want to thank him for it.” Hiyama also thanked the Obon Society and the Japan War-Bereaved Families Association, which helped find him.
 
The only son of the fallen soldier was born July 5, 1943, the same day his father left home for the Imperial Army and the war, Hiyama said. “Honestly, I don’t know anything about him,” he said of his father, adding that his parents had been married only a year when he was born. The Obon Society called in April to say that the flag would be returned, Hiyama said. “I was surprised,” he said, adding he didn’t think something that belonged to his father would be returned after all these years.
 
Hiyama said he hopes to display the flag so relatives of the people who signed it also see it. It is the only memento he has of his father. “I want to take time to take a close look at it,” he said.
 
#army #closure #friendship #japanesflag #mediacoverage #nonbiologicalhumanremains #obonsociety #obonソサエティ #pacificwar #peace #soldier #veteran #yosegakihinomaru #太平洋戦争 #日本遺族会 #日本陸軍 #靖国神社

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