From the AFT:
“101-year-old returns to Pearl
Harbor to remember those lost”
(Pearl Harbor survivor and World
War II Navy veteran David Russell, 101, poses for a photo along with a painting
of the USS Oklahoma at his home on Monday, Nov. 22, 2021, in Albany, Ore.)
When Japanese bombs began falling
on Pearl Harbor, Navy Seaman 1st Class David Russell first sought refuge below
deck on the battleship Oklahoma. But a split-second decision on that December
morning 80 years ago changed his mind, and likely saved his life. “They started
closing that hatch. And I decided to get out of there,” Russell, now 101, said
in a recent interview. Within 12 minutes his battleship would capsize under a
barrage of torpedoes. Altogether 429 sailors and Marines from the Oklahoma
would perish — the greatest death toll from any ship that day other than the
battleship Arizona, which lost 1,177.
Russell plans to return to Pearl
Harbor on Tuesday for a ceremony in remembrance of the more than 2,300 American
troops killed in the Dec. 7, 1941, attack that launched the U.S. into World War
II. About 30 survivors and 100 other veterans from the war are expected to
observe a moment of silence at 7:55 a.m., the minute the attack began. Survivors,
now in their late 90s or older, stayed home last year due to the coronavirus
pandemic and watched a livestream of the event instead. Russell is traveling to
Hawaii with the Best Defense Foundation, a nonprofit founded by former NFL
Linebacker Donnie Edwards that helps World War II veterans revisit their old
battlefields.
He recalls heading topside when the
attack started because he was trained to load anti-aircraft guns and figured he
could help if any other loader got hurt. But Japanese torpedo planes dropped a
series of underwater missiles that pummeled the Oklahoma before he could get
there. Within 12 minutes, the hulking battleship capsized. “Those darn
torpedoes, they just kept hitting us and kept hitting us. I thought they’d
never stop,” Russell said. “That ship was dancing around.” Russell clambered
over and around toppled lockers while the battleship slowly rolled over. “You
had to walk sort of sideways,” he said. Once he got to the main deck, he
crawled over the ship’s side and eyed the battleship Maryland moored next door.
He didn’t want to swim because leaked oil was burning in the water below.
Jumping, he caught a rope hanging from the Maryland and escaped to that
battleship without injury.
He then helped pass ammunition to
the Maryland’s anti-aircraft guns. After the battle, Russell and two others
went to Ford Island, next to where the battleships were moored, in search of a
bathroom. A dispensary and enlisted quarters there had turned into a triage
center and place of refuge for hundreds of wounded, and they found horribly
burned sailors lining the walls. Many would die in the hours and days ahead. “Most
of them wanted a cigarette, and I didn’t smoke at that time but I, uh, I got a
pack of cigarettes and some matches, and I lit their cigarettes for them,”
Russell said. “You feel for those guys, but I couldn’t do anything. Just light
a cigarette for ‘em and let ‘em puff the cigarettes.”
Russell still thinks about how
lucky he was. He ponders why he decided to go topside on the Oklahoma, knowing
most of the men who stayed behind likely were unable to get out after the hatch
closed. In the first two days after the bombing, a civilian crew from the Pearl
Harbor Naval Shipyard rescued 32 men trapped inside the Oklahoma by cutting
holes in its hull. But many others perished. Most of those who died were buried
in anonymous Honolulu graves marked as “unknowns” because their remains were
too degraded to be identified by the time they were removed from the ship
between 1942 and 1944. In 2015, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency exhumed
388 sets of these remains in hopes of identifying them with the help of DNA
technology and dental records. They succeeded with 361. Russell’s
brother-in-law was among them. Fireman 1st Class Walter “Boone” Rogers was in
the fireroom, which got hit by torpedoes, Russell said. The military identified
his remains in 2017, and he’s since been reburied at Arlington National
Cemetery. Russell remained in the Navy until retiring in 1960. He worked at Air
Force bases for the next two decades and retired for good in 1980.
His wife, Violet, passed away 22
years ago, and he now lives alone in Albany, Oregon. He drives himself to the
grocery store and the local American Legion post in a black Ford Explorer while
listening to polka music at top volume. When he’s not hanging out with other
veterans at the legion, he reads military history and watches TV. He keeps a
stack of 500-piece puzzles to keep his mind sharp. For decades, Russell didn’t
share much about his experiences in World War II because no one seemed to care.
But the images from Pearl Harbor still haunt him, especially at night. “When I
was in the VA hospital there in San Francisco, they said, ‘We want you to talk
about World War II.’ And I said, I told them, I said, ‘When we talk about it,
people don’t believe us. They just walk away.’ So now people want to know more
about it so we’re trying to talk about it. We’re trying to talk about it, and
we’re just telling them what we saw,” he said. “You can’t forget it.”
^ Tomorrow is the 80th
Anniversary of the Attack on Pearl Harbor. Russell is one of the few Survivors
as well as one of The Greatest Generation. ^
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