British Army veteran who fought against Japan visits Tokyo’s national cemetery

9 October 2023, 14:54

Army veteran Richard Day talks to Tokai University professor Yukihiro Torikai
Japan Britain WWII Veteran. Picture: PA

Richard Day, 97, laid flowers at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in a memorial ceremony to stress the importance of reconciliation.

A British Army veteran who fought against the Japanese in the Burma Campaign during the Second World War has laid flowers at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Tokyo in a memorial ceremony to stress the importance of reconciliation.

Richard Day, 97, who survived the decisive 1944 Battle of Kohima in north-east India – where Japan fought to capture the then British-controlled territory – stood up from a wheelchair, placed a wreath of red flowers on a table, and saluted the souls of the unknown Japanese soldiers at Tokyo’s Cihdorigafuchi National Cemetery.

“It was very moving, but it brought back some terrible memories,” he said after the ceremony.

Japan Britain WWII Veteran
British Army veteran Richard Day shakes hands with Tokai University professor Yukihiro Torikai (Mari Yamaguchi/AP)

He said that when he was laying the flowers “I was remembering the screams of people … they were crying out after their mothers.”

He shook hands at the memorial and later conversed with relatives of the Japanese veterans who also attended the event.

“You can’t carry hate,” Mr Day said. “(Otherwise) You are not hating each other, you are hurting yourself.”

Mr Day was in his late teens when he was sent to the notoriously severe battle, where he also faced harsh conditions, including contracting malaria and dysentery simultaneously while fighting the Japanese.

About 160,000 Japanese were killed during the battle, many from starvation and illnesses due to insufficient supplies and planning.

Some 50,000 British and Commonwealth troops were also killed, nearly half of whom perished in brutal prison camps.

Japan Britain WWII Veteran
British Army veteran Richard Day, far left, attends a memorial ceremony at the Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery in Tokyo (Mari Yamaguchi/AP)

Hard feelings toward Japan’s brutal treatment of prisoners of war remained in Britain years after the fighting ended.

Yukihiko Torikai, a professor of humanities and culture at Tokai University, attended on behalf of his grandfather, Tsuneo Torikai, who returned from the campaign alive after his supervisor ordered a withdrawal.

The academic shook hands with Mr Day, expressing his appreciation of the British veteran’s trip to Japan.

He later said he is aware that not everyone is ready for reconciliation and that it would have been even better if a Japanese veteran who survived the battle could have been at the ceremony.

“As we foster friendship, it is important to remember the past, not just putting it behind,” he said.

Japan Britain WWII Veteran
Military officials salute the unknown Japanese soldiers who died overseas during the Second World War, at the Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery in Tokyo (Mari Yamaguchi/AP)

Military officials from the embassies in Tokyo of former allied countries, including the United States, New Zealand and Australia attended the ceremony.

Event organiser Akiko Macdonald, the daughter of a Japanese veteran who also survived the Battle of Kohima and now heads the London-based Burma Campaign Society, said the joint memorial in Japan for those lost in the battles of Kohima and Imphal was especially meaningful.

Mr Day was also set to visit and pray at Yokohama War Cemetery, where many of the buried were PoWs, as well as Yamagata, Hiroshima.

He also wanted to visit Kyoto to find the hotel where he stayed while on post-war duties to thank them for their hospitality.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Israel Palestinians

Israel and Hamas agree ceasefire to pause Gaza war and release some hostages

Breaking
A ceasefire between Israel and Hamas is reaching its final stages

Gaza hostage and ceasefire deal 'has been reached', Hamas official says

Trump Cabinet Rubio

Rubio vows to place US interests ‘above all else’ as Trump’s top diplomat

A California Department of Corrections hand crew works containment lines ahead of the Palisades Fire

Final round of dangerous conditions forecast in Southern California amid fires

Donald Tusk spoke at a news conference alongside Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Russia is 'planning acts of air terror' against airlines worldwide, Polish PM warns

Mount Everest from Kala Pathos, Khumbu valley, Nepal

Brit to attempt 'fastest ever' Everest climb, with help from xenon gas

Donald Tusk

Tusk accuses Russia of planning acts of terror against ‘airlines over the world’

A vehicle carrying impeached South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol leaves for Seoul Detention Centre

Impeached South Korean President taken to detention centre after questioning

Donald Tusk points as he shakes hands with Volodymyr Zelensky

Polish leader vows to use EU presidency to speed up Ukraine’s membership bid

Sweden announces tough new migration policy.

Sweden announces strict new citizenship policy - including proving you demonstrate 'honest living'

Volodymyr Zelensky and Donald Tusk shake hands

Zelensky visits Poland amid deal on exhuming Polish wartime massacre victims

Robby Kinlan

Backpacker's cause of death revealed after body found mysteriously on Thai 'death island'

Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike in Deir Al-Balah in the central Gaza Strip

Palestinian Authority should run Gaza in future, leader says

INS Nilgiri, left, along with Submarine Vaghsheer, right, and INS Surat

Indian navy launches submarine and warships to guard against Chinese presence

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off

Two private lunar landers head for the moon in roundabout journey

NATO jets were scrambled today following a Russian attack on Ukraine (FILE)

NATO jets scrambled as Putin launches 'massive' attack on Ukraine near Polish border