‘Peace is better than war’; Vet talks about his time as a WWII interpreter
Now almost 95, Big Island-born Takahata currently resides at Yukio Okutsu State Veterans Home in Hilo. He spoke recently about his time in the military.
He was also stationed in Baguio City, Philippines.
“We were in the northern part of the Philippines,” he said, and his group stayed on the outskirts of the airbase there.
Baguio had a busy airport then, Takahata said, one that served the South Pacific area.
Takahata said interpreters were supposed to work with prisoners of war, “and find out their stories, how they survived, because this was right as the war ended.”
“We spoke their language, and we (were) supposed to understand the customs,” he said. “That’s one of the main reasons they chose us as a 10-man team to go down. But most of the prisoners we talked to were college grads in Japanese. … Sometimes they had a hard time understanding us.”
While stationed overseas, Takahata said they had a chance to visit “some of the countries we never been to, like India, China, (places) close by. … It was more like a vacation to us.”
Takahata served in the Army for four years. After he was discharged, he returned to Hilo and worked at his father’s auto parts store.
Email Stephanie Salmons at ssalmons@hawaiitribune-herald.com.

