OKINAWA 78 years ago Stars & Stripes – Pacific
By PFC. WILLIAMS LAND | STARS AND STRIPES May 22, 1945
Stars and Stripes presents these archive reports as they were written by the reporters in the field. The graphic and politically incorrect language used may be offensive to some readers.
Editor’s Note: A fortnight ago Bill Land, one of our battlefront reporters, learned that he was a father. Back to us by radio came this story of Oki’s orphans. Unable to go home to see his own daughter in Baton Rouge, La., Bill let himself go on Oki’s orphans – being left to die by the Sons of Heaven. But the GIs wouldn’t let the kids die…
OKINAWA – Here’s a story you could call “The Children’s Hour.” Ever since I got that radio about my new baby daughter I’ve had in mind writing a children’s story, especially since the material is so plentiful.
It is said that there are more children on Okinawa than there are goats, and, brother, that is some statement.
Very rarely does one see a woman who isn’t carrying either a born or unborn child around and most of the time it’s both.
For doughboys and leathernecks, the care of children started on the first day of the invasion, and from the way it keeps on, it looks as though “the Children’s Hour on Okinawa” will outlast Lillian Hellman’s play on Broadway.
Military government has even set up an orphanage, probably the first the island has seen.
“Since the natives showed interest only their own babies, we had to do something to care for children whose parents were killed or missing,” said Army Capt. W. W. McAllister of Iowa City, Ia., the officer in charge.
Nipples are made from surgical gloves and the orphans seem to take kindly to their new diet of canned milk through a glove.
In another part of the island, Chief Pharmacist’s Mate Hugh Bell of Iberia, La., found himself playing the role of a mother when his outfit, a Marine reconnaissance unit, was scouting for suspected enemy installations and suddenly came upon a whole colony of natives hiding in a cave. Most of them were starving and sick and 35 children required immediate medical attention.
Bell, being the only “doctor in the house,” had all of them on his hands. For 24 hours he treated them, giving them plenty of food and feeding them canned milk while his buddies drank their coffee black.
“The kids thought I had used magic to fix them up,” he said, “and followed me around whenever I went. The headman of the group of cave dwellers told the unit command later that Bell was called “Mother” whenever they referred to him.
It is not at all a strange sight to see kids running around in cut-off GI woolen underwear or rompers made of fatigues, but Sally’s diapers made of green camouflage cloth really take the cake. Sally’s one of the orphans.
Sitting on the hard coral rock playing with the ration can, it looks as if she selected a soft tuft of grass to place her little behind on.
Pfc. John J. Stroke of Olmsted Falls, Ore., found her. She’s a two-year-old girl, and Stroke supervised her bath and sprinkled her with anti-vermin powder. Then, with the help of marine fatigues, a jungle knife and couple of pins, he went into the diaper business.
With most able-bodied Japs in the Imperial army or navy there seems a definite shortage of obstetricians among civilians and therefore many deliveries have to be performed by American soldiers and medics.
Relating his first attendance at childbirth here, First Class Pharmacist’s Mate Richard P. Scheid of Napoleon, O., warned, “I knock down anybody who calls me a mid-wife.”
As in the play, “The Children’s Hour,” and everywhere else, for that matter, there are good little children and naughty ones.
The other day, Sgt. Elvis Lane, marine combat correspondent from Louisville, Ky., ran across a couple of them who didn’t want to take to the American way of life at first. Dressed in a ragged Jap soldiers’ suits, they kept hoping to fight the “American devils” who were soon to be blasted by superior Japanese power.
That night, enemy units attacked the camp in which the two boys were staying and the air was filled with screams of the Jap wounded, the rat-tat-tat of machine gun fire and explosions of hand grenades. When morning came, the boys stared in horror at the Jap bodies and one of them said:
“Jap is a big liar. I think my brother and I want to be like our father – farmers.”

Marine First Lieutenant Hart H. Spiegal of Topeka, Kansas, uses sign language as he tries to strike up a conversation with two tiny Japanese soldiers captured on Okinawa. The boy on the left claims he is “18” while his companion boasts “20” years.
CLICK ON IMAGES TO ENLARGE.
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ANZAC DAY
Please keep in mind that Tuesday, 25 April is a remembrance day for Australians and New Zealanders.
It is one that I have tried to show respect and honor to…
https://pacificparatrooper.wordpress.com/?s=ANZAC+Day
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Military Humor –
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Farewell Salutes –
Thomas E. Button – NZ; RNZ Navy, CPO (Ret. 20 Y.)
Robert G. Cole – Montague, NJ; US Army, Vietnam, 101st Airborne Division, Bronze Star
Trevor Crawley – Hawkes Bay, NZ; RNZ Air Force # D80250, Flight Lt.
James Graham – Dunlap, TN; US Army, Korea, 187th RCT/11th Airborne Division
Ernest E, Hamilton Sr. – Key West, FL; US Air Force, Korea
Noah Evans – Decatur, GA; USMC, Pfc, M Co/3/Recruit Training Regiment
Peter W. Leufkens – Palm Springs, FL; US Army, Korea
William Peterson – Tamp, FL; USMC / US Coast Guard
Ken Potts (102) – Honey Bend, IL/Provo, UT; US Navy, WWII, PTO, coxswain, USS Arizona survivor
Robert R. Samples – Charleston, NC; US Army, Japanese Occupation, 187/11th Airborne Division, Army boxing team
Jozef Subritzky-Kusza – NZ; RNZ Army # A483345, Sgt.
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From GP –
I apologize if I happen to be missing some posts lately. The routine here has been disrupted somewhat.
Thank you for being understanding.
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Posted on April 24, 2023, in Current News, First-hand Accounts, Post WWII, WWII and tagged ANZAC Day, Australia, History, Military, Military History, New Zealand, Okinawa, Pacific War, Tributes, WW2, WWII. Bookmark the permalink. 126 Comments.
I can’t imagine what it would be like to be a child amid the horror of war. I am pleased to read of our soldiers’ ingenuity and compassion in caring for them.
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Thank you. I think most all people care for children, but their actions depend on what type of army they’re in.
This worked against them in Vietnam, where mother’s would actually have a grenade in a baby’s diaper and pull the pin as they handed it over to a G.I.
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My father-in-law “cut his teeth” as a physician during the Battle of Okinawa and never spoke of his experiences.
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Understandable. We can only imagine what your father went through.
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