Shortly after the departure of the 1st Raider Battalion, the 2nd Raider Battalion disembarked at Aola Bay. Its task was pursuing three thousand hungry and exhausted Japanese soldiers retreating from the eastern side of the island to rejoin elements of the Japanese 17th Army on the western side of the Matanikau. The Raiders spent a month pursuing the Japanese on what was called the Long Patrol.
It seemed like it was raining all the time. We also had to cross many rivers. We had to climb a steep ridgeline dividing the Lunga and Tenaru valleys using ropes that we each carried and then linked together. We found an artillery piece that had been shelling Henderson Field. It was nicknamed "Pistol Pete." Several men took it apart and threw it over a cliff.
We came upon a Japanese field hospital and bivouac area. We killed a lot of JapsWhy kill the wounded? I don't think I could look at an injured man and kill him, even if I was in a war. -sarah baker 3/26/09 10:08 AM
Not out of anger at least. I suppose I could kill a wounded man if he had killed people I loved. But when you never knew them and they are laying there in pain the only reason I would kill them is to put them out of their misery. -Christine Wright 3/27/09 9:06 AM
. We bayoneted and shot anything that was still moving. It was a series of grass huts. They were on the ground wounded. Several had broken legs. It didn't look like they had proper medical attention, because some were bent on a 45-degree angle. They weren't sticking straight out. We were back in Japanese territory and didn't want to make noise, so we used bayonets. I was pretty angry. We had a patrol, and they captured one of our men and tied him over a log and used him as a woman. They rammed a bayonet up his butt and he bled to death. That made me angry! I can see the anger that he's talking about. Some of the war crimes are really terrible. -sarah baker 3/26/09 10:10 AM
Now that's personal. That would make me kill him if he was wounded. Your fellow soldiers are like your family. -Christine Wright 3/27/09 9:09 AM
So whenever I'd get into action, I'd get angry. I wasn't afraid when I was angry. We all felt that way after what we had seen.
After we left the area, we went up around Mount Austen. They ambushed us on the top. We had one man wounded. We carried him out; it was a long way down the mountain. We had jungle rot on our crotch and down our legs so bad that we had to stop every once in a while to empty the blood out of our shoesEWWWWWW!!!!!!!!!!!!! That sounds. . . uncomfortable. -sarah baker 3/26/09 10:13 AM.
Can you imaine your body rotting away? -Christine Wright 3/27/09 9:11 AMIt was painful. When you're in the field like that, you go, and you can't worry about pain.
The Raiders were a very special group. They're all volunteers. They were very select. We were interviewed by Evans Carlson or Jimmy Roosevelt. Roosevelt interviewed me and asked me if I was afraid to die. I said, "Anybody not afraid to die is a fool. But I would if it came to that. I wouldn't hesitate." He passed me.
Friday, March 27, 2009
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