Web site aims to be depository of Pearl Harbor survivor memories
Since 09-10-06
From:
Waspscpo@aol.com [mailto:Waspscpo@aol.com]
Sent: Saturday, September 09, 2006 7:22 PM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: Web site aims to be depository of Pearl Harbor survivor memories
Web site aims to be depository of Pearl Harbor survivor memories
"There's an
hourglass that's dropping sand everyday," said Daniel Martinez, chief historian
at the USS Arizona Memorial Park.
Visitors to the Web site (
http://www.pearlharborstories.org ) see photos of survivors and their own
unique tales — how they joined the military and how they got to be at Pearl
Harbor, or other Hawaii military installations, on the day of the Japanese
assault.
The site
asks survivors who haven't recorded their stories to register and do so, via the
Web or over the phone if they prefer.
Martinez said he hopes civilians who lived through the attack — and their
families — would submit their memories as well, because their perspectives are
important to the full story of what happened.
He gave as an example the three local men who were killed at Hickam Air Force
Base after they responded to a call for help from the Honolulu Fire Department.
Or the experience of U.S. Sen. Daniel K. Inouye, 81, who raised his fist at the
invading planes in frustration when he was a 17-year-old Japanese-American high
school student.
"That's
the kind of story that can emanate from Hawaii and let people know in Dubuque,
Iowa, what it was like to be a person of Japanese-American ancestry and what
they went through," Martinez said.
Alby Saunders, 54, son of Ansil Saunders and a board member of the Arizona
Memorial Museum Association, said he would be pleased if the site deepens the
public's knowledge of the attack.
"I hope the site helps to perpetuate the stories to be handed down even beyond
our times. Because once they're gone, they're gone forever," Saunders said. "To
document them, to describe them, is important particularly at this time."
The National Park Service already has on file audio and video recordings of some
450 interviews of survivors taken over the past 20 years, Martinez said. The new
web site may help this number grow by the thousands, he said.
_____
On the Net:
The Pearl Harbor Survivor's Project:
http://www.pearlharborstories.org
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)