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Flags of our Fathers
All war is hell, they say. But the battle over Iwo Jima in February
1945 thrust its combatants into the deepest circle of Dante's Inferno.
For more than a month, on a tiny sulfurous island in the middle
of the Pacific, 70,000 Marines threw themselves at 20,000 Japanese
defenders. The latter were not so much on the island as inside it,
entrenched in a honeycomb of fortified tunnels and well-hidden,
man-made caves. Day after day, the Marines struggled to advance
while receiving devastating fire by invisible enemies. When it was
all over 36 days later, the Marines had suffered 26,000 casualties.
Yet they had succeeded in their goal of securing the island for
a vital American airfield within striking distance of Japan. And
they had done it with uncommon valor -- more Congressional Medals
of Honor were awarded here than in any other battle in American
history. And on the fifth day of the battle, atop Mount Suribachi,
a small group of them raised a flag, a moment captured in a iconic
photograph that came to symbolize the heroism of American soldiers
in the war.
Clint Eastwood's new film, "Flags of our Fathers" (based
on the book by James Bradley, son of one of the flag-raisers), explores
the battle, the famous photo and the poignant aftermath of both.
Here is some historical background on the characters and events
portrayed in the film.
Q. Didn't photographer Joe Rosenthal stage that flag-raising photograph?
A. He did not, though that rumor has circulated for decades. The
moment's spontaneity is confirmed in the film footage shot by another
combat photographer at the same time. Rosenthal admitted he was
lucky to get the photo he did. The flag went up so quickly that
he never got a chance to frame the shot in his viewfinder.
The confusion began because Rosenthal took another photograph that
day, a staged "gung-ho" shot with Marines posed under
the flag, grinning and waving at the camera. A few days later on
Guam, Rosenthal was asked by a fellow photographer if he had staged
his photo. "Sure," he replied, thinking of the "gung-ho"
picture, and not yet aware of the stir his flag-raising photo had
caused. His response quickly hit the media, and the charge that
the iconic image was staged has persisted like an annoying weed,
despite 50 years of denials by Rosenthal and the participants.
Q. But it wasn't the first flag-raising on Suribachi, right?
A. It was the second, a point never denied by Rosenthal and the
surviving flag-raisers. A smaller flag had been raised earlier by
a different group of men, to the accompaniment of a cacophony of
cheers from thousands of Marines below the hill.
Captivated by the moment, a high-ranking military observer on the
beach demanded the flag as a souvenir. A larger American flag was
duly carried up Suribachi, and raised just as the first was lowered.
But it was a replacement flag, and raising it was a minor event
for the six men involved. The moment gained significance solely
because of Rosenthal's stirring photograph.
But neither the first nor the second flag-raising signaled the
end of the battle. It raged on for 31 more days, taking the lives
of half of the men on Mount Suribachi that day, and punishing its
survivors with memories that would haunt them for a lifetime.
Q. Is it true that one of the men in Rosenthal's photograph was
misidentified for two years?
A. It is. When the photo became a sensation in America, President
Roosevelt ordered that the participants be identified and brought
home to serve as the cornerstone of a massive War Bond drive. But
three had already died, and there was initial confusion over the
figure at the base of the pole, his back to the camera. He was said
to be Hank Hanson, another dead Marine, whose mother was brought
along on the Bond Tour. The survivors -- John Bradley, Rene Gagnon,
and Ira Hayes -- knew the figure was actually Harlon Block, but
were ordered to keep quiet.
As the film shows, though, Block's mother insisted throughout that
the figure in the photo was her son. But the truth might have remained
hidden had not Ira Hayes, a year after the war ended, hitchhiked
1,300 miles to the Blocks' home to tell them Harlon was indeed in
the photo.
Q. Before the battle, when the American military armada was steaming
toward Iwo Jima, the film shows a man falling overboard and not
getting rescued. Could that have happened?
A. Apparently so, for Bradley's book recounts the incident. The
invasion of Iwo Jima was a massive operation, involving the coordination
of 800 ships carrying 100,000 Marines and Navy support personnel.
Covering 4,000 miles of ocean over three weeks, the armada was not
going to stop for one man.
Q. Whatever happened to Iggy, John Bradley's friend? The film doesn't
really show us.
A. Bradley, the father of author James Bradley, was apparently
haunted in later years by the fate of his friend, Ralph "Iggy"
Ignatowski. Bradley found his gruesomely tortured body in a cave
a few days after he had disappeared. The Japanese had cut out his
tongue and ears, gouged out his eyes, and dismembered him.
The younger Bradley had never understood his father's lifelong
refusal to discuss his war experiences with his wife or children.
But discovering the manner of Iggy's death helped James appreciate
his father's silence.
In fact, it was only after the elder Bradley's death in 1994 that
his family discovered he had been awarded the Navy Cross for his
bravery on Iwo Jima. Bradley, a corpsman (a combat medic), had rushed
between the lines to a fallen Marine's aid, administered first aid,
then dragged him to safety, all while under a withering cross fire
of mortars and machine gun fire. It was an incident he never mentioned
to his family.
Q. Where can I find more information on Iwo Jima?
A. James Bradley's moving "Flags of our Fathers" (Bantam,
$7.99), which he wrote with Ron Powers, is a great place to start.
Cathy Schultz, Ph.D., is a history professor at the University
of St. Francis in Joliet and writes a syndicated column on historical
films.
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