Posted
Wednesday, November 23, 2005; 11:20 a.m.
The 'Pied Piper of Saipan'
A forgotten hero of World War II almost washed
out. He was too short.
By Cecilia Rasmussen,, L.A. Times
"The Pied Piper of Saipan" almost didn't get into World
War II. Guy Louis "Gabby" Gabaldon was just 5 feet 3 and
had a perforated eardrum; the Navy rejected him.
But when the Marines learned he could speak Japanese — gritty
slang picked up on the streets of Boyle Heights — that was
a different story.
That's how Gabaldon came to capture more than 1,100 Japanese single-handedly,
leading soldier and civilian alike to safety.
"Japanese prisoners were a bit of an oddity at that time,"
said Steve Rubin, who produced the documentary "East L.A. Marine:
The Untold True Story of Guy Gabaldon," which is to have its
premiere this weekend at a Veterans Day celebration at Cal State
Fullerton. "The credo of most soldiers of the Japanese army
was kill or be killed. Capturing one Japanese was considered a feat.
Bringing in 1,100 was unthinkable."
Rubin and Latino community activists are lobbying for Gabaldon
to receive the Medal of Honor. "No one has been more ignored
and with such an untouchable record in military history," Rubin
said.
Gabaldon is among about 500 World War II veterans profiled in a
new book, "Undaunted Courage — Mexican American Patriots
of World War II," which was produced by Latino Advocates for
Education Inc.
"Latinos have fought in every war since the American Revolution
and were never given due credit," said Orange County Superior
Court Judge Frederick P. Aguirre, founding president of Latino Advocates.
"Our preliminary studies estimate over 500,000 Hispanic Americans
served their country during World War II, in which more than 9,170
gave their lives." One dozen received the Medal of Honor.
Gabaldon, 79, lives in Florida now. He walked around his old neighborhood
last week, marveling at how familiar it remained.
He grew up during the Depression, one of seven children, in a small
house on Chicago Street.
"Not much has changed," he said. "Back then we had
Russians, Latinos, Japanese and Jews all living on the same block."
As a youngster, Gabaldon always had to prove how tough he was.
He jumped from second-story windows, hopped freight trains and got
into fistfights.
He seemed destined for trouble. But a film, and friendship, helped
turn his life around.
In 1936, at age 11, he saw "The General Died at Dawn,"
an action-packed thriller starring Gary Cooper as an American in
China who tries to smuggle money to help the Chinese fight a ruthless
warlord.
"I hoped maybe some of [Cooper's] goodness would rub off on
me," Gabaldon said. "But instead it was two Japanese American
twin boys, Lane and Lyle Nakano, and their family who did that for
me."
Gabaldon and the Nakano boys met at Hollenbeck Junior High School
(now a middle school). The Nakanos lived on 1st Street, a few blocks
north of the Gabaldons. "I found myself fascinated by my adopted
family, their customs, language and even food," he said.
He lived with them, off and on, for the next five years. "Back
then, no one cared if you stayed away from home for a few days or
not," he said.
Despite their influence, his street fights continued.
"I went to Andrew Jackson, a high school for bad boys, where
I got my nose, ribs and knuckles broken getting into fights,"
he said.
During the day, he worked as a shoeshine boy on skid row. At night,
he and some of his "bad boy" friends would dive off the
Hollenbeck Park bridge into the lake. "We never knew how dangerous
it was, until we found stakes sticking up from the lake bed after
they drained it," he said.
The Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, drawing the
United States into World War II. The next year, President Franklin
D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, authorizing the detention
of Japanese Americans.
The Nakanos had to leave.
"I wanted to go to the internment camp with them, but they
wouldn't let me," Gabaldon said.
Then 16, he dropped out of school and went to Alaska to work in
the fishing industry. The next year, in 1943, he joined the Marine
Corps.
He was assigned to the 2nd Regiment of the 2nd Marine Division
as an intelligence scout and observer. A few months before his unit
was shipped to the Pacific, he went home on leave.
"In 1943, that's when I got into a fight at a bowling alley
at Whittier and Lorena in East Los Angeles, with a bunch of zoot-suiters,"
he said. "I always liked a good fight, but I don't know why
they picked on me, except that maybe I was the only guy around in
a uniform. They broke my jaw and put me in the hospital for two
months. It was the best duty I ever pulled."
In June 1944, nine days after D-day in Europe, he landed on Saipan,
a 25-mile-long rocky outpost in the Northern Mariana Islands, more
than 1,200 miles southeast of Tokyo.
On the first day of combat, the enemy proved stubborn. "I
had to throw hand grenades," killing 33 Japanese soldiers,
Gabaldon said.
In succeeding days, he disobeyed orders and scouted the island
alone. He persuaded a handful of Japanese soldiers and civilians
to surrender, bribing them with cigarettes and food.
Gabaldon said he would capture about six soldiers and civilians
at gunpoint but release three, telling them to spread the word about
good Americans and fair treatment. He would also tell them that
if they didn't return, he'd kill the other prisoners.
"Of course I didn't," he said. "But it worked."
That's how he captured 800 in a single day and earned the sobriquet
"the Pied Piper" from his commanding officer, Capt. John
Schwabe.
The wounded prisoners hobbled on crutches made of bamboo spears.
Soldiers turned over their ancient samurai swords. He made the men
strip to their loincloths, making them less likely to cause trouble
or conceal weapons.
Still, many believed the propaganda that Americans were butchers
and rapists. Civilians began leaping from cliffs in mass suicides.
"I watched, helpless, as a mother threw her baby over the cliff,
then herself," Gabaldon said.
Gabaldon was wounded by machine-gun fire after the island was fairly
secured. He received the Silver Star for valor.
He left the Marine Corps as a private first class and came home
to Boyle Heights, where he married June, a Russian American girl
from the neighborhood. They had six children but later divorced.
He then married Ohana Suzuki, a woman of Japanese descent living
in Mexico. They had five children, and he became a successful pilot
and importer south of the border.
Hollywood discovered Gabaldon in 1957, after the television program
"This Is Your Life." Three years later, his life story
inspired the 1960 movie "Hell to Eternity," which depicted
Gabaldon as an Italian American played by blue-eyed Jeffrey Hunter.
The film stirred complaints about Hollywood's failure to portray
Latinos' heroism in American wars. The controversy encouraged the
military to upgrade Gabaldon's Silver Star to the Navy Cross.
In 1970, while Gabaldon and his wife were living in Mexico, federal
immigration authorities arrested Ohana at the California border
and accused her of being an illegal immigrant. A furious Gabaldon
mailed his Navy Cross to President Nixon, along with a note: "You're
on your last leg, Tricky Dick," The Times reported in 1978.
In the mid-1970s, Gabaldon and Ohana moved to Saipan. He held various
jobs there, including police chief, tour guide and drug-abuse counselor
for teenagers. He also wrote his autobiography, "Saipan: Suicide
Island," which was published in 1990.
Sometime while Gabaldon was living out of the country, an FBI agent
returned the Navy Cross to Gabaldon's father.
After living on Saipan for two decades, the couple returned to
California in 1995 and moved to Florida in 2003.
Three years earlier, in 2000, then-Marine Corps Gen. James L. Jones
upgraded Gabaldon's rank from private first class to corporal.
"He told me to keep my nose clean and maybe in another 50
years, I'd be a sergeant," Gabaldon said.
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"Undaunted Courage — Mexican American Patriots of World
War II" can be purchased at
http://www.latinoadvocates.org .
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