Documentary, My Grandfather's Story: A Japanese Holdout in Indonesia
Japanese Holdout in Indonesia
A Japanese holdout in Indonesia refers to a soldier of the Imperial Japanese Army or Navy who continued to fight or remained hidden in the region after Japan's official surrender in World War II on September 2, 1945.
These individuals either doubted the surrender's authenticity, were unaware of it due to severed communications, feared execution upon surrender, or felt bound by duty to never yield.
Some holdouts joined local independence movements, such as the Indonesian struggle against Dutch colonial rule, which began in 1945 after Japan's surrender.
Around a thousand Japanese soldiers remained in Indonesia and fought alongside Indonesian nationalists, with approximately 300 choosing to stay permanently after the war for independence ended.
One notable example is Kuroiwa Toru, a Japanese holdout who served in a secretive "special police force" in Aceh, Sumatra, during the war. He led a unit of 300 young Indonesians and used extreme measures to suppress Dutch supporters, earning a reputation for ruthlessness and becoming a feared figure among locals.
Despite this, he is remembered positively by many in Aceh, who credit him with helping secure their independence.
His grandson, Mario Kuroiwa, has since sought to uncover his grandfather's story, which was largely forgotten by history.
Another significant case is that of Teruo Nakamura, an Amis aborigine from Taiwan who was part of the Takasago Volunteers, a unit of Japanese soldiers composed of indigenous people from Taiwan and other parts of Asia.
Nakamura was separated from his unit on Morotai Island in Indonesia after Allied forces secured the island in 1944.
Believing the war was still ongoing, he lived alone in the jungle for 30 years, surviving by hunting, farming, and using a homemade abacus for entertainment.
He was discovered by the Indonesian Air Force on December 18, 1974, and surrendered to a search patrol.
Nakamura, who spoke neither Japanese nor Chinese, was the last confirmed Japanese holdout.
He returned to Taiwan, where he faced a changed homeland, with his wife remarried and his son a father of four.
He died of lung cancer in 1979.
These stories illustrate the complex legacy of the Japanese occupation in Indonesia, where some holdouts were seen as oppressive occupiers, while others, like Kuroiwa Toru, were later viewed as heroes by the very people they once suppressed.
The Indonesian government and public have maintained a complex, often ambivalent, memory of the occupation, shaped by both trauma and the post-war economic relationship with Japan
#Japanese #Documentary #Indonesia #JapaneseHoldoutinIndonesia
#Story #GrandfatherStory #JAPAN #Japanese
Japanese Holdout in Indonesia
A Japanese holdout in Indonesia refers to a soldier of the Imperial Japanese Army or Navy who continued to fight or remained hidden in the region after Japan's official surrender in World War II on September 2, 1945.
These individuals either doubted the surrender's authenticity, were unaware of it due to severed communications, feared execution upon surrender, or felt bound by duty to never yield.
Some holdouts joined local independence movements, such as the Indonesian struggle against Dutch colonial rule, which began in 1945 after Japan's surrender.
Around a thousand Japanese soldiers remained in Indonesia and fought alongside Indonesian nationalists, with approximately 300 choosing to stay permanently after the war for independence ended.
One notable example is Kuroiwa Toru, a Japanese holdout who served in a secretive "special police force" in Aceh, Sumatra, during the war. He led a unit of 300 young Indonesians and used extreme measures to suppress Dutch supporters, earning a reputation for ruthlessness and becoming a feared figure among locals.
Despite this, he is remembered positively by many in Aceh, who credit him with helping secure their independence.
His grandson, Mario Kuroiwa, has since sought to uncover his grandfather's story, which was largely forgotten by history.
Another significant case is that of Teruo Nakamura, an Amis aborigine from Taiwan who was part of the Takasago Volunteers, a unit of Japanese soldiers composed of indigenous people from Taiwan and other parts of Asia.
Nakamura was separated from his unit on Morotai Island in Indonesia after Allied forces secured the island in 1944.
Believing the war was still ongoing, he lived alone in the jungle for 30 years, surviving by hunting, farming, and using a homemade abacus for entertainment.
He was discovered by the Indonesian Air Force on December 18, 1974, and surrendered to a search patrol.
Nakamura, who spoke neither Japanese nor Chinese, was the last confirmed Japanese holdout.
He returned to Taiwan, where he faced a changed homeland, with his wife remarried and his son a father of four.
He died of lung cancer in 1979.
These stories illustrate the complex legacy of the Japanese occupation in Indonesia, where some holdouts were seen as oppressive occupiers, while others, like Kuroiwa Toru, were later viewed as heroes by the very people they once suppressed.
The Indonesian government and public have maintained a complex, often ambivalent, memory of the occupation, shaped by both trauma and the post-war economic relationship with Japan
#Japanese #Documentary #Indonesia #JapaneseHoldoutinIndonesia
#Story #GrandfatherStory #JAPAN #Japanese
Category
📚
LearningTranscript
00:00August 17th is Indonesia's Independence Day.
00:13For the people of Indonesia, it's the most important day of the year.
00:21They celebrate freedom from over three centuries of Dutch rule
00:25and three and a half years of Japanese military occupation.
00:30The proclamation of Indonesian independence was made on August 17th, 1945,
00:46two days after Japan's surrender in the Second World War.
00:53But the Netherlands sought to re-establish control,
00:56prompting the beginning of a war for independence.
01:00Around a thousand Japanese soldiers remained in Indonesia
01:07and fought on the side of the nationalists.
01:12They are known as the Japanese holdouts.
01:19After the war for independence,
01:21around 300 of the survivors elected not to return home.
01:25Some of them founded a welfare organisation known as YWP.
01:40The walls of its office are covered with photographs of former soldiers.
01:44They spent the rest of their lives in Indonesia and were buried here.
01:56Mario Kuroiwa is a third generation Japanese Indonesian.
02:01His grandfather was one of the holdouts.
02:04His grandfather was one of the holdouts.
02:06He returned there,
02:07He was for the first one.
02:08He was here for the first time.
02:21He was born in the last year.
02:23My father, Kuroiwa, came back to Japan in 1955.
02:33Why did Kuroiwa Toru stay in Indonesia?
02:37And why did he then return to Japan?
02:41The family he left behind had no clear understanding.
02:48But these are the questions that Mario has set out to answer.
02:53It's just a special group.
02:57I know that Mr Kuroiwa is working in discipline.
03:04If you're in Japan or you don't have two people,
03:07you don't know what's going on.
03:11His reputation changed over time.
03:16At first, he was part of an oppressive occupying force.
03:20Then, he was a hero, leading the war for independence to victory.
03:27Later, the central government came to fear his political influence.
03:34Sad story, bad story, or a good story, for me, I just want to know the truth.
03:43I just want to find out what is the truth and move forward.
03:4680 years on from the Second World War, we trace the life of a mysterious former soldier whose story was almost lost to history.
03:58In June 2023, Japan's emperor and empress visited the city of Jakarta in Indonesia,
04:12and laid flowers at a cemetery for military casualties in the war for independence.
04:31Some of the graves belonged to the Japanese holdouts that participated in the war.
04:44But their existence was forgotten by a society keen to establish a new nation.
04:55Meanwhile, the Japanese government saw them as deserters and did not offer support.
05:01They remained in Indonesia, living quiet lives.
05:08Today, they have as many as 5,000 descendants.
05:13They are the ones who had the opportunity to meet the soldiers from the world.
05:16They have a lot of gratitude.
05:17They have to be grateful for their Johan-Ryuhei.
05:18And they have to be happy.
05:19They have to be happy with the Lord of the King.
05:21And they have to be happy with the Endgame.
05:22The Lord of the King is the most grateful for the Lord of the King.
05:23And they have to be happy with the Uriah-Kuroyawa.
05:25The Lord of the King is the most thankfulness of the Uriah-Kuroyawa.
05:27Mario Kuroiwa runs a company in Jakarta.
05:40It sells engine oil for marine vessels.
05:46During his childhood, he struggled with his Japanese ancestry.
05:52In the history of our school, when we were SD and SMP,
05:58it was often written that Japan came to Indonesia to protect Indonesia.
06:05Sometimes there are people who cry from far away,
06:09''Hey, Japan! Anak penjajah!''
06:12Until now, sometimes I see from Yonsei,
06:17I see from my father's parents,
06:20who was born in school,
06:23and also when I was studying history,
06:25when I was talking about...
06:29As a child, Mario had no response to his bullies.
06:34He found this extremely frustrating.
06:37There are very few public records that mention Kuroiwa Toru.
06:44There are very few public records that mention Kuroiwa Toru.
06:51The YWP has the personal accounts of 230 Japanese holdouts,
06:55tracing the period during and after Japanese occupation.
06:58Mario searches for any mention of his grandfather.
07:13Because it is written like Japanese from Lok Nga.
07:27Yeah, exactly.
07:28My grandfather was also stationed in Lok Nga.
07:32It's coming from Taiwan.
07:34Taiwan military.
07:37One of the accounts mentions fighting on Sumatra alongside Kuroiwa Toru.
07:49It's the first direct reference to Toru's time in the military.
07:58In Ache, there was a special police force led by Kuroiwa Toru.
08:07It used extreme measures to suppress Dutch supporters.
08:16Kuroiwa was a special police.
08:19It became so well known that the local people understand the word special.
08:26And they feared him as much as or more than the military police.
08:32Yeah, yeah.
08:34To learn more about his grandfather's actions in the special police,
08:36Mario is visiting Ache.
08:37To learn more about his grandfather's actions in the special police,
08:38Mario is visiting Ache.
08:39province in northern Sumatra.
08:44in northern Sumatra.
08:45in northern Sumatra.
08:46to learn more about his grandfather's actions in the special police.
08:49Mario is visiting Ache.
08:51province in northern Sumatra.
08:53Ache is where Islam first arrived in Indonesia.
08:54The region flourished as a hump for government.
08:55to learn more about his grandfather's actions in the special police.
09:00to learn more about his grandfather's actions in the special police.
09:02Mario is visiting Ache province in northern Sumatra.
09:06Ache is where Islam first arrived in Indonesia.
09:21The region flourished as a hump for commerce.
09:27It has an independent culture and is known for its determined resistance to Dutch rule.
09:40The headquarters of the special police force led by Kuroiwa Toru is now a war museum.
09:48Kuroiwa, in his late 20s, led a team of 300 young Indonesians.
09:55Their goal was to maintain public order.
10:01Mario has come to the town of Longa, where his grandfather once lived.
10:18Mario is surprised to encounter several people who knew his grandfather.
10:38Mario has sticks.
10:40Lee glitches.
10:41Ma'alaikum.
10:42Wa'alaikum Wa'alaikum.
10:43Yahya was one of the soldiers recruited to bolster the Japanese army.
10:51He was training for doing the petty society of Mohawk,
11:04When there was no food, it didn't exist.
11:09It was like this, it was like this, it was like this, it was like this, it was like this, it was like this.
11:14It was the private, the private people.
11:17Do you have been a poor boy?
11:20No.
11:22No, I haven't been a poor boy.
11:24I have been a poor boy for 50 years.
11:27If not in Japan, I would have been a poor boy.
11:31I'm really happy because my grandfather has left a positive impression among Argentines.
11:49Tracing his grandfather's footsteps, Mario finds the family of a former special police
12:02officer. Evida and her family lived in Aceh during the war.
12:18Her father, Alamsha, earned Koroiwa's trust and became his direct report.
12:48Evida has held onto a gift from Koroiwa, a military sword.
12:55I know that Koroiwa is a hard worker, a military sword.
13:02I know that Koroiwa is a hard worker in Aceh Krim. If there is a war, if there is a mistake,
13:10then the Germans would die.
13:13I know that it's a long time ago.
13:14It's a long time ago.
13:15It's a long time ago.
13:16It's a long time ago.
13:17I was told that it was a long time ago.
13:20I haven't experienced it.
13:21It was a long time ago.
13:22I saw it all in the paper in a long time.
13:27You know that the thing was bad and bad.
13:30It was so important that it was not a good thing because it was taken a lot of people's lives,
13:37too.
13:38But the thing with my uncle was born again.
13:43What circumstances brought Kuroiwa to Indonesia in the first place?
13:58In December 1941, Japan sparked war with the United States with an attack on Pearl Harbor.
14:10At the same time, Japanese troops landed on the Malay Peninsula.
14:16They progressed south, and in March 1942 they occupied Indonesia, which was at that point
14:24a Dutch colony.
14:27It was at around this time that Kuroiwa arrived in Indonesia.
14:36Han's goal was to secure the territory's plentiful resources, such as oil.
14:43In Indonesia, Kuroiwa, and Indians, and others.
14:50In the region of the Middle East, everyone is one of the largest family.
15:00The Japanese forces touted freedom from colonisation, giving hope to the people of Indonesia.
15:22But many were forced to conduct hard labour and support the Japanese military in battles.
15:28The economy collapsed.
15:33Attitudes towards Japan shifted from hope to revolt.
15:41As head of a special police force under Japanese control, Kuroiwa conducted intelligence operations
15:48and exposed those with anti-Japanese sentiment.
15:56How did he acquire the skills required to carry out this mission?
16:03He volunteered for military service aged 19.
16:08Throughout his twenties, he participated in the Second Sino-Japanese War.
16:18Kuroiwa himself described why he was sent to Indonesia.
16:28I was recognized for my pacification skills and sent on a special mission to Sumatra.
16:35U.S.
16:45The time for the day of the day of the day of the day of the day of the day of Japan.
16:49I think it's possible that we can fight in a regular battle than we can.
16:56I think there's a lot of hope that we can do it.
17:02Professor Sawada highlights the unusual duties of the special police.
17:09If you think about the business of the SMATRA,
17:15I can't do that in Taiwan, so I can't do that in Taiwan.
17:29On August 15, 1945, Japan's surrender ended its three and a half year occupation of Indonesia.
17:37A proclamation of independence was made by Sukarno and Hatta, leaders of the independence movement, and broadcast via radio to the nation.
17:51Kuroiwa had contributed to Indonesian oppression.
18:15But with a potential Dutch return on the horizon, he found himself in a vastly different position.
18:26The day after the war ended, he gave instructions to his subordinate, Alamsha.
18:34It's written in Indonesian language, right?
18:37Yes, this is the Japanese language.
18:40This is the Japanese language.
18:42The Japanese army surrendered to the Allies.
18:59I'm giving you 350,000 yen.
19:04I leave our clothing and equipment to you.
19:07Ah, this is Showa Niju, Hachi Gatsu, Juroku Niji.
19:16But it's written in English.
19:18It's written in English.
19:19It's like Romaji.
19:20Yeah, 8 Gatsu, 16 Niji.
19:24Yeah, on the 16th, 8th.
19:26Oh, 6th.
19:27Yeah, Indonesia must have to fight themselves, right?
19:29Yeah.
19:30The army is prepared for this.
19:31The 350,000 yen that Alamsha received would be worth 100 million yen today.
19:44Kuroiwa had connections high up in the army, and could move large sums of money.
19:51As the Japanese army was disarmed, Kuroiwa arranged for some of its weapons to be left with the Indonesians.
20:11In December 1945, ships departed from a port in Aceh bearing Japanese soldiers home.
20:29Kuroiwa said goodbye to his former comrades in arms.
20:41Later, in a Japanese magazine, he gave his reasons for staying behind.
20:46I considered returning home with the other soldiers, but I'd been part of a special unit.
20:56I was afraid of being declared a war criminal, so I stayed.
21:01When I was here, there's a place where I was my hands.
21:02When I was in the army, I was to be kissed, and I was scared.
21:03This was the first time in the army, and I was just a young man.
21:04When I was in the army, I had a victory in the army.
21:05I was taking it to my camp and I had to leave.
21:06After the army, I jumped out.
21:07The people were going to be Umm-to-warned, by the Japanese man.
21:08And I was in the army and I was to be Catalnauk.
21:09And I was to be able to get back.
21:10I needed to know the people who had a warm up and lots of people.
21:11I tried to be APIs.
21:12Wow, but I was in the army, but I still too, in my parents.
21:13The people were just going to be in the army.
21:16The people who were fighting in the army to be.
21:17Professor Kurasawa points out another potential reason.
21:47Kurasawa points out a lot, but I decided that it was a lot of money.
21:56But I decided that it was a lot of money.
22:01So I decided not to go back to Japan.
22:07I wanted to help myself.
22:12Having decided to stay, Kuroiwa set out to create an independence army.
22:21He was supported by the man he'd given 350,000 yen, Alamsha.
22:42Kuroiwa's team took gunpowder from discarded Japanese ammunition and combined it with water pipes to make mortars and various other weapons.
22:57The facility became an important base for the pro-independence forces.
23:03Just as the Japanese army was leaving, the Dutch arrived on Sumatra.
23:13Kuroiwa and other Japanese holdouts joined the Indonesian nationalist forces in the fight for independence.
23:22In 1947, the Netherlands launched an all-out attack.
23:28They captured two important cities on Sumatra.
23:31They advanced on Pankalan Prandan, ahead of an assault on Aceh.
23:38Their objective was to take control of a large oil refinery.
23:47But standing in their way was Kuroiwa Toru.
23:51He knew that the loss of the refinery would be a blow for Indonesia.
24:00But he asserted that the only way to stop the Dutch army was to blow up the entire area.
24:06The Indonesian leaders were wracked with indecision.
24:12We must go all out. All out.
24:15Kuroiwa stormed over from the refinery.
24:18His argument worked.
24:21And on August 13th, the oil refinery was destroyed.
24:32To the end, Aceh was never invaded by the Dutch.
24:37In December 1949, the Netherlands was destroyed by the Dutch.
24:40The Dutch was destroyed by the Dutch.
24:41It was also destroyed by the Dutch.
24:42But then there were two more people in the war.
24:44It was thus far off.
24:45And we had a total of 100% of them.
24:47In January 1945, the Netherlands recognized Indonesian independence.
24:48In December 1949, the Netherlands recognized Indonesian independence, bringing the four and a half year war to an end.
25:18One hundred and ten kilometres east of Aceh lies Sumatra's largest city, Medan.
25:31It's where Mario was born and raised.
25:43Mario's father, Hendri, is Kuroiwa Toru's second son.
25:50His mother is also the daughter of a Japanese holdout.
25:57Hendri worked in the coffee business for a Japanese trading company before becoming independent.
26:07He roasts coffee beans and sells them locally and abroad.
26:15He has very few memories of his father.
26:21Kuroiwa married an Indonesian woman during the war for independence and later joined the management of a state-run business.
26:30But after Hendri was born, he was frequently apprehended by the government and sent to prison.
26:45Finally, in 1955, he left his family behind and returned to Japan alone.
26:58With his father gone, Hendri supported his mother by working as a street trader every day after school.
27:07His father went to my church in France.
27:29It's hard for me, and it's hard for me.
27:32When I want a car, I want to go.
27:37I want to know what's going on.
27:44Hendri felt abandoned by his father.
27:48The thought troubled him for most of his life.
27:54When I was a kid, I was a kid.
27:59Or I was a kid because my father was not there.
28:03So, I believe in my heart that it wasn't a desire to do that.
28:11But it's because it's a fight for my family to live.
28:24It's hard for me.
28:30Why did Kuroiwa suddenly return to Japan, leaving his family behind?
28:38In search of an answer, Mario and his parents have come to Japan.
28:43First, they seek out someone who worked with Kuroiwa in Aceh.
28:56There was a child's son in Aceh.
28:58There was a child's son.
29:02Hello, I'm sorry.
29:04I'm sorry.
29:09Hello, I'm sorry.
29:11I'm sorry.
29:12Yes, sir.
29:14Oyamada Yoshio was a military doctor during the war and the chaotic period after Japan's surrender.
29:21He later returned to Japan and opened a clinic.
29:27When Kuroiwa returned in 1955,
29:30Oyamada was the first person he looked to for support.
29:51It was written in the book.
29:54I think there was no place to go.
29:59Kuroiwa stayed with Oyamada for around six months.
30:10A photograph taken at New Year,
30:13one month after his return to Japan.
30:21It was the same as my mother and mother.
30:31Next to Kuroiwa is Oyamada's eldest daughter, Izumi.
30:39She was 14 years old at the time,
30:42but she remembers Kuroiwa well.
30:46Kuroiwa's daughter,
30:47my brother was the last house,
30:50my husband's son.
30:52My husband's son.
30:53He is a husband's son.
30:55They look like he's the husband.
30:57My husband's son.
30:59He is a husband's son.
31:01He was told to marry a mother...
31:04.
31:33And also, this made me happy with Yumi-sang.
31:39It made me realize that, actually, my father is loving us.
31:49Yes.
31:51You are very proud of me.
31:56I have heard this, I really felt that my father was wrong.
32:06I thought that my father didn't care about me.
32:12How do you feel?
32:16It's like my father.
32:20You are so cute.
32:24Let's go.
32:29It's hot.
32:44I feel now it is more than already finished.
32:49Even small, I am now very, very, very, very...
32:54...behargated.
32:56Songke.
32:57Appreciate.
32:58Songke.
32:59Songke.
33:00My father.
33:02Now, yeah.
33:04100%.
33:06Yeah.
33:07I appreciate my father.
33:17Meanwhile, Mario has grown curious about Izumi's story.
33:22She said that his grandfather was exiled permanently from Indonesia.
33:26This report describes Japanese holdouts in Aceh during the War for Independence.
33:39Kuroiwa was feared as a member of the Special Police Force.
33:46After Japan's defeat, their atrocities were strangely forgotten.
33:55Now, citizens trust them. They're influential.
33:59The new Indonesian government worried that the holdouts would maintain their influence after the war's conclusion.
34:14Once Indonesian independence is recognized, we'll be able to take steps against the Japanese soldiers.
34:21Theond initiate mission...
34:31One feels like I should make independence in our country...
34:34...but I would never say a mess, but I should not goalyze that were imagined.
34:36Deborah what did I say to anybody?
34:38The verdadeç„¶ cells made it up in each other.
34:40They got much hope of stopped beingcesso to actually Japanese soldiers.
34:43So this is an immediate matter.
34:45Do you think it's your why?
34:48Mario has discovered diplomatic records
34:58explaining the circumstances of Kuroiwa's exile.
35:12In Aceh, a movement grew in support of self-governance,
35:16and Kuroiwa was allegedly involved behind the scenes.
35:25After the War for Independence,
35:27Aceh was granted the right to autonomy within Indonesia.
35:34However, in 1950,
35:36it was incorporated into North Sumatra province.
35:40This led to an armed revolt
35:42in which Kuroiwa was said to be involved.
35:46The archive also contains the following information.
35:57Kuroiwa was popular among the people of Aceh.
36:00He was regarded as the leader of the Japanese holdouts.
36:04The government detained him in order to curb the political influence of the Japanese.
36:14They mentioned it as a hidden power among the Aceh people.
36:25So it seems like the Aceh people were listening to him.
36:30So maybe if he said something which is not what the Indonesian government wanted,
36:42maybe then it will create a problem.
36:45Mario is struggling to find more information.
36:57But a certain book has caught his eye.
36:59It's called Holy War in the Medan area.
37:04Its author, Amran Zamzami,
37:10was an officer in Kuroiwa's unit during the War for Independence.
37:14After the war,
37:17he worked for a state-run business
37:19and was sent to work in Tokyo in 1963.
37:23This happened the following year.
37:26Someone called out to me at the Indonesian embassy.
37:36It was a small, plump man in his forties.
37:39Kuroiwa.
37:44In Indonesia, he had a reputation as an underground agent and fearsome warrior.
37:53But back in Japan, he was completely serene.
38:00Zamzami took the opportunity to ask Kuroiwa
38:04why he participated in Indonesia's War for Independence.
38:09Kuroiwa gave him this reply.
38:16To fulfill Japan's promise to guide and free Indonesia from colonization
38:22as the older brother of the Asian nations.
38:26He also revealed a desire to atone for the Japanese occupation
38:32and for his actions in the special police.
38:37How does Mario feel about his grandfather's explanation?
38:44Namun di sini kan dia merasa bersalah
38:49karena dia adalah bagian dari Jepang.
38:52Apa yang bisa saya lakukan untuk menebus dosa
38:56yang telah dilakukan oleh negara saya kepada Indonesia?
38:59Kuroiwa.
39:09Back in Aceh, where Kuroiwa spent the war.
39:13Hidupong, maaf.
39:15Kuroiwa.
39:16Tepatuh.
39:17Kuroiwa.
39:18Kuroiwa.
39:19Kuroiwa.
39:20Kuroiwa.
39:21Kuroiwa.
39:22Kuroiwa.
39:23Kuroiwa.
39:24Kuroiwa.
39:25In this area, the house is not stone, the house is stone, so there is no rest.
39:39This large site was well-known locally for holding a weapons factory and Kuroiwa's home.
39:50The influential landowner lived opposite. He was friendly with Kuroiwa, but was killed by the Japanese army.
40:01His bereaved daughter is still there, living in the same house.
40:09However, in her old age, she needs constant care.
40:15For this reason, both her family and Mario are reluctant to hold a direct meeting.
40:22The next day, a film crew is permitted to visit.
40:29The next day, a film crew is permitted to visit.
40:35Hafid is the grandson of the murdered landowner.
40:50He says that his grandfather assisted Kuroiwa in various ways and that the pair built a relationship of mutual trust.
41:09The incident took place in 1944.
41:16The incident took place in the airport.
41:18The Japanese army and the Japanese army were allowed to visit.
41:19However, the Japanese army took place in the airport and took place.
41:23They took place and then took place.
41:28So, the people from the village and other people of the village and other people of the people of the country,
41:31including the family of the homeless, were not paid attention to that.
41:34It was said that Kakek supported the sabotage from the police officer
41:41to remove the telephone cable.
41:46Then the cable was stolen.
41:51Then, after it was stolen, it was stolen from the back of Kakek,
41:55without all the information of Kakek.
41:58His 89-year-old daughter, Mardum,
42:01agrees to an interview despite her condition.
42:05At the time, Kuroiwa led the organisation cracking down on anti-digital
42:35Japanese activities.
42:38It was said by Ayawa and Mama.
42:42It was also said by Mama.
42:46It was said that, at the moment,
42:49it was considered that Karewa was one of the commanders
42:52that was very affected in the area.
42:55It was said that,
42:56it was said that,
42:57it was said that,
42:58it was said that,
42:59it was said that,
43:00it was said that.
43:02Two years later,
43:04the family discovered where Jumat's body had been buried.
43:10It was a small pond deep in the mountains.
43:17It was a small pond deep in the mountains.
43:22It was a small pond deep inside the mountain.
43:44It doesn't identify who lives in this place.
43:51Before he was killed, Jumat was subjected to a brutal interrogation.
44:14Later, during the war for independence, Kuroiwa visited the family home.
44:44After her interview, Marudum's condition took a turn for the worse.
44:56She requested a meeting with the Kuroiwa.
45:01After her interview, Marudum's condition took a turn for the worse.
45:08She requested a meeting with Mario.
45:15He asked not to be filmed and entered Marudum's house alone.
45:22Hafid tells us that Mario held Marudum's hand as he spoke to her.
45:37She asked.
45:38She wants to be smiled and she was able to be healed.
45:41She is already here.
45:42She is now back to her husband.
45:44She is already back to him.
45:47She is now back to her husband.
45:48She is now back to her husband.
45:49She is soon to be healed.
45:50She is sorry for her husband.
45:51There was a son of his son who came to me and told him to forgive his son.
45:57He was very proud of his son.
46:01The situation was long ago.
46:13You are also responsible for what you did with him.
46:17I didn't think it was.
46:19I was surprised to have a sense for myself.
46:25What was it said to her child?
46:30What was it said to her child?
46:34It could not be a hurt person who didn't mean to her.
46:39And even the事 that could not be transferred.
46:42I believe that the pain will surely not be able to die for forever.
46:48Although we can forgive ourselves, but we can not forget it.
46:57So, the pain will always be remembered that there will be a pain.
47:05But I am very grateful.
47:12After meeting Mario, Mardum passed away.
47:22Kuroiwa spent the final years of his life at a retirement home near Tokyo.
47:42Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:44Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:46Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:48Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:50Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:52Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:54Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:56Kuroiwa's bedroom.
47:58Soца and laura young people.
48:00I don't think there was anything I'd like to talk to myself.
48:07I had to wash my room.
48:10This paper came out.
48:13It's called Kuroiwa.
48:16Displayed on the wall was a picture Kuroiwa painted before his death.
48:36It shows Longa in Aceh, where he was finally able to build a family in the aftermath of the wall.
48:46Kuroiwa died in August 2000.
48:53He lived for 85 years, torn between two countries.
49:00Because of my son, there are a lot of things that until he dies, it seems to be still alive.
49:15But whatever happened from my son, I was a kid.
49:20Kuroiwa
49:22Kuroiwa
49:24Kuroiwa
49:26Kuroiwa
49:28Kuroiwa
49:30Kuroiwa
49:32Kuroiwa
49:34Kuroiwa
49:36Kuroiwa
49:38Kuroiwa
49:40Kuroiwa
49:42Kuroiwa
49:44Kuroiwa
49:46Kuroiwa
49:48Kuroiwa
Recommended
46:04
|
Up next
2:30
2:23
58:38
59:29
46:21
25:25
25:36
21:27
46:04
49:50
56:44
49:51
49:52
48:13
47:33
1:19:48
59:31
58:26
28:41
28:09
Be the first to comment