In the post yesterday about Gettysburg, KYFANATIC mentioned “this ominous feeling I got while walking the Battlefield areas near a hill.” I had that same feeling while visiting Gettysburg and several other battlefields I have visited in my travels.
The first time I had it was on my first overseas tour on Okinawa. Anyone who has read anything about the War in the Pacific knows what a horrendous battle took place on Okinawa. However, before I got to Okinawa, everything I had read and seen was about the American side of the battle. Soon after my arrival, I became interested in the local people (outside of the bars) and their culture. Since I had joined the Army with the intention of learning about other places and other cultures I started studying Japanese and I found that I could learn more about the people if I went to remote villages –away from the bars and regular GI hangouts.
Since I had arrived there in early 1957, the war was still vivid in the memories of most of the locals. Not only that, but there were still many physical ruminants left to be seen, i.e., intact and destroyed fortifications, scared landscapes, wrecked ships on the beaches and in the water, as well as many monuments and plaques dedicated on the sites of various battles.
To make a long story short, I repeatedly heard stories about the ghosts of the Japanese soldiers that committed suicide by jumping off the Shuri Cliffs on the South end of the Island. When I visited the area I had heard about, I soon understood why there were “ghost stories’ about the place. The first place I visited was at the top of the cliffs and the nearby, mostly destroyed, Shuri Castle. I didn’t feel anything at that time, except awe that soldiers, American and Japanese, had fought in such a place.
Then, I went to the base of the cliffs and that is when I got that “ominous feeling” that those Japanese soldiers were still walking around that area and trying to get back home. I can’t really explain it, except to say I just had a feeling that hundreds of souls were still there.
Another place on Okinawa where I had “that feeling” was on Yon Tan Airfield towards the Western middle part of the Island. Yon Tan had been one of the two main Japanese airfields. The story was that these airfields were connected by tunnels which were believed to be heavily mined and booby-trapped and well defended by Japanese soldiers and airmen.
Rather than trying to clear the tunnels, the American Marines simply concreted in all the entrances they could find, leaving the Japanese defenders to die of starvation, suicide or whatever. Most Okinawans would not go onto the old airfield area because of the ghosts there. Since Yon Tan was just up the hill from my base, I visited there several times. During a couple of my early visits I had that “ominous feeling” that the Japanese soldiers were walking around under the ground where I stood.
There are a couple more places on Okinawa where I got “that feeling” but I will leave it there. Anyhow, besides those already mentioned, I have had “that feeling” several other places, including at Pearl Harbor, Loc Ninh, Viet Nam, and Andersonville, South Carolina.
I cannot explain “that feeling” except to say that, in varying degrees, it was a feeling that a dead person or people were in the area and wanted me to know it. For me, it has always come in or around military settings and the “ghosts” were military people. However, I am sure that many non-military people have had the same feelings and even with ghosts that were not military. There are too many ghost stories to not believe in them.
World military history is replete with stories of soldiers and sailors that were visited by ghosts, apparitions, and premonitions before during and/or after battle. Years ago, I had a book with over a hundred examples of such visitations. I wish I still had it because right now, I don’t remember any of them. Now, I am not saying I am in that category, but I do believe it happens.
The ancients believed in ghosts, gods, and things that go bump in the night and they saw them frequently. For the most part, modern peoples don’t believe in ghosts and most of us don’t ever see them. I firmly believe that today there are just as many ghosts, gods, and things that go bump in the night as there ever were, and maybe more than before, but they don’t come to people that don’t believe in them.
That is my experiences and opinions for whatever they are worth.
Grumpy



Reply With Quote