You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Culture Wars
Today in History, The Road To Victory Begins!
2007-12-07
I found this in a guide book while on vacation in Hawaii, and today it might be of interest to rantburgers.

The Battle Of Niihau

Sunday, December 7, 1941, was like any other Sunday on Niihau (Nee-ee-hau), the oldest and farthest northwest of the major Hawaiian islands. Niihau had no radios then. Even if they had had them, the English-language broadcasts from Oahu would have been meaningless to most Niihauans, who spoke Hawaiian, not English. Niihau's owners the Robinsons, made weekly visits by sampan from Kauai. It was Niihau's only connection with the outside world. And after the Japanese attack, the Army forbade the weekly sampan visit -- all of which was unknown to the isolated Niihauans.

One Japanese plane, damaged and unable to return to its carrier, landed in a plowed field on Niihau. The pilot gave his papers to a Niihauan, Hawila Kaleohano --in effect surrendering. And then it seemed, there was nothing else to do except to wait for the sampan to come. A week passed. No sampan. No news.

The pilot went on the offensive. There were two other Japanese people on Niihau. The pilot appealed to their patriotism, sure that they would help him. One refused, the other, Yoshio Harada, agreed and helped the pilot take the machine guns from the crippled plane so the guns could be used to control the island. But he never got to use the guns because Benehakaka ("Benny") Kanahele stole the guns' ammunition, rendering them useless.

Now the pilot wanted his papers back, but Hawila Kaleohano had disappeared with them. So the pilot burned down his house, took Benny Kanahele and his wife hostage, and sent Benny to look for Hawila. When Benny returned without Hawila, the pilot tried to shoot Benny and his wife. Benny, then fifty-one, jumped the pilot, taking three bullets in the stomach as he seized the pilot and dashed his brains out against a stone wall. Yoshio Harada shot himself. The Battle of Niihau was over.

The indestructible Benny Kanahele became one of Hawaii's heroes. Many years later, our friend Dan Masaki, then a kid, worked in a grocery store with Benny. He remembers Benny as a cheerful, hardworking, massive man with a huge bald head and huge hands. Benny would say of the Battle Of Niihau, "When he shot me the second time, I got really angry!" And then he got even.

From: Oahu Trails, by Kathy Morey
Posted by:bruce

#6  Nevada was a fine old ship; it's a pity they cut her up. Joe, tell your Uncle Pete we thank him for his service.
Posted by: Mike   2007-12-07 22:24  

#5  My mother's older brother PETE/PEDRO was aboard the USS NEVADA on Dec. 7th, 1941 at PEARL HARBOR -he's now in his early 90's and wheelchair-bound many times, but still has the manly gumption to try and get about on his own two feet despite his age and medical problems.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-12-07 22:12  

#4  Roughly/Broadly speaking, in case of war agz Japan. the US plan was for MacArthur to hold out in the Philippines while awaiting the arrival of the US fleet and air forces. Japan destroyed this scenario by attacking Pearl Harbor, i.e. sinking the US fleet first. AIRPOWER + OTHER 20th CENTURY INNOVATIONS > WARFARE = NAVAL BATTLES WERE NO LONGER "GENTLEMANLY" OR "KNIGHTLY", TRAFALGAR/NAPOLEONIC ERA LINEAR BROUHAHAS BETWEEN CAPITAL SHIPS + NOBLE COMMANDERS.
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2007-12-07 18:13  

#3  Sneak Attack: Small Arms at Pearl Harbor - The Ayoob Files
Posted by: anonymous5089   2007-12-07 13:40  

#2  ORIGINAL PEARL HARBOR PHOTOS
Posted by: anonymous5089   2007-12-07 12:22  

#1  A heartwarming and inspirational feel-good story if ever there was!

More details of the story here.
Posted by: Mike   2007-12-07 08:49  

00:00