Pearl Harbor Hero Returns Home After 75 Years in an Unknown Grave | National Geographic

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I do understand where people think that you should not disturb a grave but I think it's a personal decision for the family and for our family it was the right decision to get him out of there my grandfather died at Pearl Harbor but it was not where he needed to be ready about the hero at his burial today dead for eight years I've been diligently trying to get to my grandfather back a lot of letter-writing a lot of red tape with the military they just don't disinterred graves when I was growing up I knew very little about him it was a taboo subject it was very hard for my mom to talk about and then once I received all of his belongings I just found out that he was such a great person and very loved he was just very much alive one of his friends from high school said he was when those guys would walk down the hall everybody would say hi he would say hi back he knew everybody he was class president in all their plays he didn't like bullying he would stick up for people he was just a kind-hearted person we know that JC was on his way to the radio room going on duty at 8 o'clock up to the radio room and everybody was either unconscious or flooding it just chaotic panic took three people up the ladder that was going out to safety and then came down a fourth time and was never seen again that's why he received the Purple Heart and the Navy named two ships after him the USS England for someone that meant so much to a family and to just have them in a grave marked unknown it's heartbreaking they went on a while just in denial maybe he has amnesia and he's wandering around Hawaii somewhere or maybe he's badly hurt I think they would have liked to have had something to bury of his even if it was just a scholar because then it's real it just wasn't policy back in those days to send the partial remains my great-grandmother would write periodically to see if anything was ever discovered this is 1946 you are advised at the bodies of personnel aboard the USS Oklahoma were buried in plots in Palo a naval cemetery at Pearl Harbor but they were unidentified the Navy again extends sympathy to you and your loss on the way home one day shortly before the 50th anniversary I would be kind of nice to get some flowers and flags at the Pearl Harbor casualties and when I got there they couldn't tell me where the Pearl Harbor cages were buried so I started walking grave site to grave site for many months check and record their records another record finally is able to figure out where they were buried there's a list a Navy Coast Guard Marine Corps casualties by States and each one of these gives the name of next akin I typed in each one of these names one finger I wrote letters to DC and finally they told me politely to go you know where which I didn't read this look tell me to go to fly a kite run which I didn't the only laughs spent a long time when they first were doing the identification processes back in the 40s all they had was dental records to work with now we have DNA that we can use and so my sister and myself and my cousin Katie we all gave the Navy our DNA samples and that's ultimately what positively identified my grandfather there will be no more unknown soldiers and if we have the right family reference samples we can successfully identify all of the unknowns that we currently have recovered from the Oklahoma as well as other conflicts like Korea or Southeast Asia no one should be buried without a name I consider it to be a moral and ethical imperative to give every unknown that we've uncovered an individual name and to send them home where they belong when my grandfather arrived at the airport it really hit me that that this is all really happening they overtook me now and it was just a wave of relief in a way and a little sadness but also happy that it was all happening I feel symbolically its closure for my great grandparents and my great aunt they didn't have closure they just continued their life with this great loss and I don't think they really properly dealt with their pain they didn't have something to bury they didn't have a place to go mourn him they never had a huge funeral where everybody gathered and got together and shared stories the sadness for my family draped over the generations unfortunately our mom died in 2002 six years before we found out about her father I often wonder what her life would have been like if he had not died I know that she struggled with the heaviness that she was born into that is why my sister Lisa and I decided to include her ashes in her father's grave as a way to heal the past and bring a long-awaited closure to our family there is a story in every grave every unknown grave has its own personal emotional story and ours we just are so grateful that we were able to have our happy ending my dog freedom I can't say he's a pet because that's just it's not enough freedom not just changed my life he did save my life
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Channel: National Geographic
Views: 382,261
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Pearl Harbor hero, veteran, veterans day, unknown grave, national geographic, nat geo, natgeo, animals, wildlife, science, explore, discover, survival, nature, documentary, hero, military hero, 75 years, U.S.S Arizona, Pearl Harbor, world war 2, WWII
Id: _at4HmHIvAk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 9min 32sec (572 seconds)
Published: Fri Nov 11 2016
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