Skip to main content

Search on Wikipedia

Search results

SO Sad! Transgender Woman Pleads For Life Before Mob Beat Her To Death. click image to read story

SO Sad! Transgender Woman Pleads For Life Before Mob Beat Her To Death. click image to read story
42-year-old Dandara dos Santos was kicked, punched, and hit with shoes and a plank of wood in front of residents in Fortaleza, Ceara state, Brazil... till death. click image to read story

Featured Post

10 Reasons Why Men Should Quit Watching Po*n

The Lonely Life Of Teruo Nakamura, The World War II Soldier Who Stayed At His Post For 30 Years

The Lonely Life Of Teruo Nakamura, The World War II Soldier Who Stayed At His Post For 30 Years




This WWII Soldiers Refused To Believe the war Had Ended --- And Remained at His post untill 1974

"I made one simple wrong judgment, and it cost me 30 years."⁠
In 1943, Taiwanese-born Teruo Nakamura joined the Japanese Imperial Army and was stationed on Morotai Island in modern-day Indonesia. Soon after his arrival, Allied forces attacked the island, and Nakamura fled into the jungle rather than surrender. Though he eventually lost radio communication with his commanders, he refused to believe that the war was ending — and stayed on the island for 30 years. When he was finally discovered in 1974, Nakamura returned to society to learn that his wife had remarried another man and that the Japanese government wouldn't pay out his full pension because he wasn't a Japanese citizen. ⁠
Go inside the tragic story of the very last World War II holdout by clicking the link in our profile.⁠

The "last of the last" of the World War II holdouts, Teruo Nakamura refused to believe the war had ended and lived in a tiny hut on Indonesia's Morotai Island until he was discovered in 1974.
Many know the story of Hiroo Onoda, the Japanese soldier who refused to believe World War II had ended and didn’t surrender until February 1974. While he is frequently referred to as the last World War II holdout, there is another lesser-known soldier who wasn’t discovered until ten months after Onoda. His name was Teruo Nakamura.

Nakamura was discovered on the Indonesian island of Morotai, where he’d been stationed in 1944. After a bloody battle in September of that year, Nakamura had been presumed dead — but he was actually deep in the island’s jungle with several other Japanese soldiers, ready to conduct guerrilla warfare as their commander had ordered.

This final World War II holdout emerged after 30 years of living in near isolation to see the whole world had changed. The discovery of Teruo Nakamura sparked significant public discussion of loyalty, ethnicity, and veteran support.

Teruo Nakamura Enlisted In 1943, But He Didn’t Know It Would Be 30 Years Before He Returned Home
Teruo Nakamura was born Attun Palalin on Oct. 8, 1919 in Taiwan. Also called Suniuo, he was a member of the Amis tribe, a Taiwanese Indigenous group. Nakamura was raised in poverty in the island’s mountains.


This cultural diversity would cause a number of debates later in Nakamura’s life. But when he enlisted in the Takasago Volunteer Unit of the Japanese Imperial Army in November 1943, there was little interest in his background.

Nakamura was stationed on Morotai Island in the Dutch East Indies soon after his enlistment. On Sept. 15, 1944, American and Australian forces attacked the island in a mission that became known as the Battle of Morotai.

The Japanese soldiers fought hard, but they were vastly outnumbered and suffered heavy casualties. Many of the remaining men surrendered to Allied troops, but some retreated into the thick jungle interior of the island. According to TIME, Nakamura’s unit had been commanded to conduct guerrilla warfare in such circumstances. He later told a reporter, “My commanding officer told me to fight it out.” So that’s what he did.

Over the next few months, many of the remaining members of the Japanese Army were captured, surrendered, or died of disease or starvation. But Teruo Nakamura remained with a small group of stragglers, determined to continue following commands even though they had no way to communicate with the outside world.

With no record of Nakamura’s surrender, the Japanese Army declared him dead on Nov. 13, 1944. It would be 30 years before his family learned the truth.

Teruo Nakamura Survived By Eating Bananas And Fishing In The Island’s Waters

Teruo Nakamura lived with several other Japanese soldiers on Morotai Island for twelve years. Since they had lost radio contact with their commanders, they had no idea the war had ended. When leaflets were dropped over the island in 1945 declaring that Japan had surrendered and the war was over, Nakamura and his comrades dismissed them as enemy propaganda.

Nakamura later told the Taipei Times that he believed the war was still ongoing due to airplanes that were constantly flying over the island. As the planes became more modern, he assumed there was an arms race occurring between the Allied and Axis powers. In reality, there was an Indonesian Air Force base nearby, and he was seeing daily practice flights.

In 1956, Nakamura left his fellow troops and set off on his own — some say because the other men tried to kill him. He built a small hut in a field and survived by growing sweet potatoes and eating bananas off of trees. He entertained himself by fishing and fiddling with an abacus he made. He cooked only when it was dark so enemies wouldn’t see the smoke from his fire.

Teruo Nakamura counted the days that passed by observing the moon cycles, and he kept track of months and years by tying knots in a rope.

“I calmly stayed alive there,” he later said. “Although I didn’t have anybody to talk to, buried deep in my heart seemed to be a glimmer of hope and expectation. The only trace of happiness during this time came from the fact that I was still alive and I hadn’t lost my sense of existence yet.”

The "last of the last" of the World War II holdouts, Teruo Nakamura refused to believe the war had ended and lived in a tiny hut on Indonesia's Morotai Island until he was discovered in 1974.

Many know the story of Hiroo Onoda, the Japanese soldier who refused to believe World War II had ended and didn’t surrender until February 1974. While he is frequently referred to as the last World War II holdout, there is another lesser-known soldier who wasn’t discovered until ten months after Onoda. His name was Teruo Nakamura.

By the 1970s, World War II had been over for nearly three decades. Young soldiers had returned home, started families, and entered middle age. But on Dec. 18, 1974, news broke that one man had never gotten the memo of the war’s end.

Nakamura was discovered on the Indonesian island of Morotai, where he’d been stationed in 1944. After a bloody battle in September of that year, Nakamura had been presumed dead — but he was actually deep in the island’s jungle with several other Japanese soldiers, ready to conduct guerrilla warfare as their commander had ordered.

This final World War II holdout emerged after 30 years of living in near isolation to see the whole world had changed. The discovery of Teruo Nakamura sparked significant public discussion of loyalty, ethnicity, and veteran support.

Teruo Nakamura Enlisted In 1943, But He Didn’t Know It Would Be 30 Years Before He Returned Home
Teruo Nakamura was born Attun Palalin on Oct. 8, 1919 in Taiwan. Also called Suniuo, he was a member of the Amis tribe, a Taiwanese Indigenous group. Nakamura was raised in poverty in the island’s mountains.

This cultural diversity would cause a number of debates later in Nakamura’s life. But when he enlisted in the Takasago Volunteer Unit of the Japanese Imperial Army in November 1943, there was little interest in his background.

Nakamura was stationed on Morotai Island in the Dutch East Indies soon after his enlistment. On Sept. 15, 1944, American and Australian forces attacked the island in a mission that became known as the Battle of Morotai.

The Japanese soldiers fought hard, but they were vastly outnumbered and suffered heavy casualties. Many of the remaining men surrendered to Allied troops, but some retreated into the thick jungle interior of the island. According to TIME, Nakamura’s unit had been commanded to conduct guerrilla warfare in such circumstances. He later told a reporter, “My commanding officer told me to fight it out.” So that’s what he did.

Over the next few months, many of the remaining members of the Japanese Army were captured, surrendered, or died of disease or starvation. But Teruo Nakamura remained with a small group of stragglers, determined to continue following commands even though they had no way to communicate with the outside world.

With no record of Nakamura’s surrender, the Japanese Army declared him dead on Nov. 13, 1944. It would be 30 years before his family learned the truth.

Teruo Nakamura Survived By Eating Bananas And Fishing In The Island’s Waters
Teruo Nakamura lived with several other Japanese soldiers on Morotai Island for twelve years. Since they had lost radio contact with their commanders, they had no idea the war had ended. When leaflets were dropped over the island in 1945 declaring that Japan had surrendered and the war was over, Nakamura and his comrades dismissed them as enemy propaganda.

Nakamura later told the Taipei Times that he believed the war was still ongoing due to airplanes that were constantly flying over the island. As the planes became more modern, he assumed there was an arms race occurring between the Allied and Axis powers. In reality, there was an Indonesian Air Force base nearby, and he was seeing daily practice flights.

In 1956, Nakamura left his fellow troops and set off on his own — some say because the other men tried to kill him. He built a small hut in a field and survived by growing sweet potatoes and eating bananas off of trees. He entertained himself by fishing and fiddling with an abacus he made. He cooked only when it was dark so enemies wouldn’t see the smoke from his fire.

Teruo Nakamura counted the days that passed by observing the moon cycles, and he kept track of months and years by tying knots in a rope.

“I calmly stayed alive there,” he later said. “Although I didn’t have anybody to talk to, buried deep in my heart seemed to be a glimmer of hope and expectation. The only trace of happiness during this time came from the fact that I was still alive and I hadn’t lost my sense of existence yet.”


Nakamura continued, “Not to lose my life became my only goal, and that exhausted almost all of my time.”

According to the Skeptoid podcast, at some point Teruo Nakamura made a connection with a local man named Baicoli, from whom he received basic necessities and creature comforts like tea and coffee. This arrangement continued for several years until Baicoli died.

In his will, Baicoli asked that his son continue to care for Nakamura. It is rumored that the son may be the one who informed authorities of Nakamura’s existence.

The Discovery Of The “Last Of The Last” World War II Holdout And His Return To Taiwan
Some reports say that Baicoli’s son alerted authorities of Teruo Nakamura’s location out of concern for his failing health. Others say a pilot happened to spot Nakamura’s hut while flying over the island.

Regardless of how the information came about, in November 1974, the Indonesian government was informed that there may be a holdout from the Japanese Army living on Morotai Island, and they worked with the Japanese Embassy to organize a search mission.

Searchers waved a Japanese flag and sang the country’s national anthem in an attempt to lure Nakamura out of hiding. It worked. On Dec. 18, 1974, Nakamura, then 55 years old, emerged. He was naked and exhausted but in surprisingly good health.

Nakamura was taken to a hospital in Jakarta, where he received a clean bill of health. Indonesian authorities then sent him back to Taiwan to be reunited with his family.

When Nakamura returned home, he realized how much had changed. His parents were dead. His son, who had been an infant when he enlisted, was a grown man with four children of his own. And his wife, assuming he was dead, had remarried.

Then came the issue of Teruo Nakamura’s pension.

When he had enlisted with the army in 1943, Taiwan had been a colony of the Japanese Empire. During his 30 years on Morotai, Taiwan had been placed under the governance of the Republic of China. Though Nakamura had fought for the Japanese Imperial Army, the Japanese government didn’t think they should have to give him back pay on the pension he was entitled to since he wasn’t technically a Japanese citizen.

This caused public outrage. Just several months earlier, Hiroo Onoda, another Japanese Army troop, was discovered in the Philippines and given his full benefits. The government argued that Onoda was a full Japanese citizen and carried the rank of an officer, while Nakamura was only a private. They initially paid him 68,000 Japanese Yen, the equivalent of around $227 at the time.

After heated discussion in the media and more public outcry, the Taiwanese government donated a total of 4,250,000 Japanese Yen to Nakamura, a payout closer to the amount Hiroo Onoda had received.

Upon his return to Taiwan, Nakamura told the New York Times, “I am very tired although I look healthy, and am very excited to see so many people here.”

According to the Taipei Times, his wife’s new husband was willing to move out and let the couple reunite. But Nakamura didn’t want to cause any chaos in their lives, so he bought an apartment nearby and spent time with them often.

For the next four years, Nakamura lived quietly and peacefully with his family. On June 15, 1979, he lost his final battle — this time to lung cancer. Despite spending nearly half of his life in isolation, Teruo Nakamura left behind a legacy of a brave man and a dedicated soldier.

Undiluted Relationship and information bring you undiluted serial killer story, serial killers facts, murder, true crime, true crimecommunity, horror, truecrime addict, crime , tedbundy , homicide ,halloween, killer, rodneyalcala, murder on my mind, ,history ,netflixandchill ,deadlymen ,crimewatchdaily ,murderisthenewblack ,historic ,fearthyneighbor ,netflixandcrime ,crime memes ,dark ,murderer ,horrormovies ,insane ,history and many. Feel free to share and comment. Bringing you the best. Undiluted Relationship and Information

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Woman Got Burnt As Gas Cylinder Explodes While Using Her Phone (Graphic photos)

Woman Got Burnt As Gas Cylinder Explodes While Using Her Phone (Graphic photos) This lady on the ground was cooking when her phone rang, immediately she picked the call, the Gas cylinder in her kitchen exploded and threw her from her floor to the ground while she got burnt, be very careful on how and where you use your phone. Here is the reasons for the explosion Immediately call comes in and you pick up heat wave is generated that's why you are advised to stay far away from the dispensing machine at the petrol ⛽ station when picking calls petrol and gas only need a little heat for a fire to break out unlike diesel.. It's even bad to pick your calls and place your phone

Housemaid kidnaps boss’ children in Lagos, moves them to Edo State

The Edo State Police Command have arrested a 21-year-old nanny, Precious Mmaduike, who allegedly kidnapped her boss’ children in Lagos and took them to Benin City, Edo State. The suspect was arrested alongside two others on Thursday, August 26, 2021, three days after she abducted the kids from their residence in Surulere area of Lagos. The other suspects are identified as Jane Osas, 35, and 45-year-old John Obasu.  The command’s spokesperson, Kontongs Bello, in a statement said, “The abduction was planned and executed by their housemaid. Precious Mmaduike, used her familiarity with the children as househelp and abducted them from Lagos to Benin City, Edo state. The father of the children said they were given N500 by his wife to buy biscuits outside the compound in the company of the nanny, but failed to return. He said the phone of the nanny was later switched off and efforts to find the children proved abortive. The father reported the situation to the Aguda police station in Lago...

Reasons Why Scammers Want You To Talk On Hangouts

Nowadays, Facebook and other social media are quick in detecting online fraudster. Fakes Facebook account are easy determined and terminated. A new fake Facebook account doesn't last longer. For a way forward, Internet scammers make use of old social media accounts. They customized them and use them to do their work. The old Facebook account or social media account period of usage is very short for them to complete their work. Facebook Usually detect such accounts and terminate them with immediate effect within the period of one weeks An internet scammer who might have gotten his prey after overnight browsing surfing the internet, will loose all want he suffered for if the fake Facebook accoubt get terminated. Within this period of one week, they thought of Hangouts and others similar APP such as what's app, telegram, etc. So as to continue their work till the end. Fully knowing that the fake account they are using will be terminated at unexpected time and for them to succeed ...

A Very Victorian Two-Penny Hangover

During the Great Depreciation in London, people who couldn’t afford to sleep in a bad could pay twopence for a spot on a bench with a clothesline tied in front of them, so they could sleep while hanging over a rope . The term ‘hangover’ is universally understood to mean the disproportionate suffering that comes after a night of over-indulgence. But where does the term actually come from? One possible explanation is, somewhat strangely, Victorian England. During the Victorian era the practice of paying for a ‘two-penny hangover’ was incredibly popular among the country’s homeless population and the term ‘two penny hangover’ was so commonly used that it made its way into contemporary literature. A two-penny hangover is not the description of a very cheap night out, nor is it the amount it would cost you to get drunk in Victorian England. It is actually somewhere you could go to sleep if you were one of the thousands of homeless and destitute living in the country’s main cities at the tim...

From Chantal Uren. This is my story

From Chantal Uren. This is my story... My name is Chantal, I'm a 37 year old Police Officer from Western Australia and I had a severe reaction after receiving the Pfizer vaccine. To the people who threatened me with defamation charges and disciplinary action for telling my story, I am disappointed. I'm disappointed that your priority is to silence me for your own ego and agenda rather than ask if I'm ok and offer me any help! At no time have you asked if I'm ok or cared for a second about my health or welfare. You decided that putting me under more stress, when that stress can cause further risk to my life is your priority. It makes me question humanity and how any person can have such a lack of empathy towards another.  If defamation and disciplinary action is what you deem suitable than I'm not afraid. I've done nothing wrong, I did what you wanted and look what happened. No one has the right to take away anyone else's experiences or tell them how they sho...

World War II: Pearl Harbor - The Atlantic

World War II: Pearl Harbor - The Atlantic An American seaman looks at the charred corpse of a Japanese flier brought up from the bottom of Pearl Harbor, where he crashed with his burning plane during the Japanese attack on December 7, 1941 in Hawaii. AP Photo An American Seaman looks at the charred corpse of a Japanese Pilot brought up from the bottom of Pearl Harbor, where he crashed with is burning plane during the attack in 1941. On December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy launched a surprise attack on the United States, bombing warships and military targets in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. More than 350 Japanese aircraft attacked the naval base in two waves, strafing targets, dropping armor-piercing bombs, and launching torpedoes toward U.S. battleships and cruisers. The U.S. forces were unprepared, waking to the sounds of explosions and scrambling to defend themselves. The entire preemptive attack lasted only 90 minutes, and in that time, the Japanese sunk four battleships and two des...

Trenchy Rats: Worst Enemy in World War 1

Trenchy Rats: Worst Enemy in World War 1 Many soldiers from World War I shared that their worst enemy in war were not the soldiers they fought against, but rather the weather, the mud, the cold and, perhaps more than anything, the rats. Rats in their millions infested the trenches where soldiers slept and lived. These rodents, sometimes huge, tried to eat the soldiers' foods, crawled over them and bit as they slept, carried diseases and nibbled on the dead comrades' corpses, sometimes disfiguring them completely by eating their faces and eyes. For these reasons, soldiers developed a passionate hatred for rats, which they tried to hunt for various methods, such as ambushing them with shotgun fire or stabbing them with their bayonets, in which a piece of cheese or bread would be attached to attract rats. Trench rats were rodents that were found around the frontline trenches of World War I. Due to massive amounts of debris, corpses, and a putrid environment, rats at the trenches b...

This South Carolina Lawyer Tried To Arrange His Own Murder So His Son Could Collect His $10 Million Life Insurance

This South Carolina Lawyer Tried To Arrange His Own Murder So His Son Could Collect His $10 Million Life Insurance In June 2021, the wife and youngest son of Alex Murdaugh were murdered at their rural estate, sending him into a spiral that ended with him hiring a hitman to kill him. With a wife and two sons, South Carolina lawyer Alex Murdaugh appeared to have it all. That is, until June when his spouse and son were killed in an unsolved murder case. The pain of losing them caused him to fall into a deep depression exacerbated by his long-standing opioid addiction. By the end of August, Alex Murdaugh had arranged to have himself murdered so that his surviving son could collect the $10 million life insurance, which Murdaugh falsely believed wouldn’t be paid out if he died by suicide. It was the culmination of years of scandals and accidents that plagued this prominent South Carolina legal dynasty, whose roots in the area go back 111 years. According to CNN, the 53-year-old attorney was ...

Reasons Why A Male President Is Better Than A Female President

Reasons Why A Male President Is Better Than A Female President A president is a leader and women are not good in leadership. They Don't support to lead. God does not make them to lead. If you examine the bible you will observed that God does not choose women as a leader. From the days of moses to the day of Jesus christ God Didn't choose woman to act. This means that God the creator doesn't support the idea of woman to be a leader. He create them to be a helper they do not have the potential of a leader. Making them as a leader or ptesident i think is a bias and is Even against God will Although God made some woman a prophetess. I find this From the amazing story of Deborah in Judges 4 to the stories of Ruth, Esther, Tamar, Rahab, Huldah. What you should know is that a prophetess is not a leader. The fact that God use them does not mean they are leaders. They are just made to say what God intend to do. Do not mistake them to be leaders This is not a discrimination...

Woman Electrocuted In Ebonyi State (disturbing Photos)

Woman Electrocuted In Ebonyi State (disturbing Photos) There was pandemonium in Ebonyi state yesterday around 8:3pm when this woman was electrocuted by electric wire which 9News Nigeria learnt that it was carelessly left naked by those maintaining Street light along udoka hall Cas campus on a path leading to her house. 9News Nigeria gathered that the woman went to fetch water with her little kid when she met her untimely death. According to an eyewitness who narrated what happened to our correspondent said that.. ”The most painful part of it is that her husband died 2yrs after their marriage leaving her the the 3 kids. The elderest among them is 8yrs” We appeal to government of Ebonyi state to assist those children and recuse them from suffering and also caution those in charge of the street light to remove all the naked wire which could be found in the along udoka hall, in Ebonyi state