Diaries of kamikaze pilots

Martin Roth has written a review of a book that sounds interesting, called Kamikaze Diaries, by Professor Emiko Ohnuki-Tierney of the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

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It tells the stories of seven young men who were compelled to become kamikaze pilots – essentially airborne suicide bombers, flying into Allied warships (the Wikipedia entry on kamikaze is here) – by the Japanese military. Most of the seven had been students at elite universities, and they kept diaries, which form the basis of the book.

It's an invaluable study. It makes clear that high levels of coercion were used to compel the students to "volunteer" for their assignments. And it shows that these were no grinning fanatics – the image that many in the West have of the kamikaze pilots. (An image I vaguely held myself, despite having lived in Japan. It's not a topic that the Japanese discuss much with Westerners.)

Link