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DESCRIPTION:\nWhile they were not supposed to take part in combat, Black Marines 
 serving on Iwo Jima played a significant role in defeating and killing the 
 attackers.\n\nOver the past three years, I have become friends with many 
 African-American veterans of WWII and Korea, and my first encounter with 
 one such veteran was in 2004 when I was preparing to go to France to help 
 commemorate the 60th Anniversary of D-day. \n\nI was graciously invited to 
 accompany the men of the 29th Infantry Division, whom you may remember from 
 the movie Saving Private Ryan. They were part of the first wave on Omaha 
 Beach, D-day, June 6th, 1944.\n\nThe veteran whom I am speaking of was 
 assigned to an ambulance battalion, and he was part of the Utah Beach 
 invasion forces. His name was Charles Benning and it was through Charles 
 that I met other African-American veterans from WWII. He went to France 
 also, with other veterans from his associations.\n\nSince that time, I have 
 had the good fortune of meeting two Tuskegee Airmen, a driver for The Red 
 Ball Express in Europe, and two soldiers from the 761st Tank Battalion.\n   
   \nLast year, I was asked by Dr. Joseph Lewis to help moderate a 
 Historical Symposium at Central State University that featured many of our 
 finest African-American WWII and Korean War veterans. \n\nIn addition, I 
 was twice given the opportunity to speak with these distinguished veterans 
 at Sinclair College at the invitation of Professor Margaret Peters. My life 
 has been greatly enriched by their stories and my heart stirred when they 
 each recounted their struggles with the prejudice and the discrimination in 
 a segregated military.\n\nThe national best seller Flags Of Our Fathers, by 
 James Bradley, was released in May of 2000.\n\nThe author’s father, John 
 Bradley, was a medical corpsman on Iwo Jima in 1945, and was also one of 
 the six flag-raisers. \n\nThe film adaptation of this book opened October 
 20th, 2006. After the film was released, a noted film director, Spike Lee, 
 was outraged that not a single African-American military man was depicted 
 or represented on that island, yet almost 900 African-American troops took 
 part in the battle of Iwo Jima.\n\nActually, there were African-Americans 
 shown in one scene where all the men were being informed, while aboard one 
 of the ships, about where they were going and what they were expected to 
 do.\n\nMy purpose here is not to evaluate or justify the presence or 
 absence of African-American Marines on Iwo Jima in this movie.\n\nHad the 
 movie been focused on the battle for Iwo Jima per se, then I would surely 
 understand the outcry.  the argument did do was stir an interest in me 
 about the African-American Marines who were there, keeping in mind the 
 trials they faced, not only in the war, but personally just by being an 
 African-American Marine.\n\nWhat I discovered in my research was that those 
 soldiers were restricted from front-line combat duty, but they played 
 integral noncombat roles. \n\nUnder enemy fire (did I say non-combat?), 
 they piloted amphibious truck units during perilous shore landings, 
 unloaded and shuttled ammunition to the front lines, helped bury the dead, 
 and weathered Japanese onslaughts on their positions even after the island 
 had been declared secure.\n\nAccording to Christopher Moore, the author of 
 a book about African-Americans’ myriad contributions during World War II, 
 "thousands" more helped fashion the airstrips from which U.S. B-29 
 aircrafts could launch and return from air assaults on Tokyo, about 760 
 miles northwest. Hosting that air base, Moore says, was Iwo Jima’s 
 primary strategic importance.\n\nAnother Iwo eyewitness, Jim Rundles, 
 wrote: “One of the bravest sights I’ve seen was on Iwo Jima where a 
 black driver of a “duck,” time and time again delivered much needed 
 ammunition to the Marines fighting at the foot of Mt. Suribachi where that 
 flag was raised.\n\nThe Japanese shot two trucks out from under him, but he 
 came back every time. Battle-hardened Marines cheered for him from their 
 foxholes.” *quote is from Montford Point Marines, by Jim 
 Rundles.\n\nLastly, I want to relate this story to you:  It begins with a 
 quote from Lt. Bob Merklin, a white P-51 pilot on Iwo in 1945. “I was 
 right in the middle of that banzai attack.  For whatever reason, when we 
 landed there on the 22nd, they had put up tents to the northwest.\n\nWhy 
 they put us up there, toward the area where the majority of the fighting 
 was going on, I don’t know.  But anyway, on the 26th at 5:00 in the 
 morning, these 300 Japanese came out of the caves and hit our tent area.” 
 The Japanese, armed with automatic weapons, bayonets, swords, and hand 
 grenades, had made their way underground from the northern part of the 
 island and attacked the tent area.\n\nThe Army Air Force units in the tent 
 area did not have observation or listening posts out so they were obviously 
 not prepared for combat, being above ground in tents. The Japanese came 
 into that area and killed 42 pilots in their sleep with swords and 
 bayonets. 88 were wounded. The quick reaction of the 5th Pioneer Battalion, 
 a white unit, and the 8th Ammo and 36th Depot, both African-American units, 
 pinched off the Japanese and then swept through, methodically killing, 
 wounding, and capturing the Japanese.\n\nTogether, they saved what could 
 have been a real catastrophe in the area. Two African American Marines were 
 awarded Bronze Stars, one was killed and several others were wounded. There 
 were 70,000 Marines engaged on Iwo Jima for 36 days.\n\nThere were 6,825 
 military men killed in action and nearly 28,000 wounded. It appears that 
 the black Marines that served and fought on Iwo Jima were very instrumental 
 in the success of securing that island. \n\nThe statement below could not 
 be more appropriate at this time. “On Iwo Jima, in the ranks of all the 
 Marines who set foot on that Island, uncommon valor was a common virtue.” 
 Admiral Nimitz, Commander of the Fleet.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/02/11/18847945.php
SUMMARY:Honoring California Black Veterans - Iwo Jima WWII - Black Marines
LOCATION:California State Library Annex\n900 N Street\nSacramento, CA  95814
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2022/02/11/18847945.php
DTSTART:20220223T190000Z
DTEND:20220223T210000Z
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