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Uomini in guerra sulla Linea Gotica - Men at war on Gothic Line

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MEMORIE FAMILIARI - Family memories
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MEMORIE PUBBLICHE - Pubblic memories
      - Bibliografia

Progetti di ricerca e comunicazione

O.S.S. Office of Strategic Services
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S.O.E. Special Operations Executive, Special Force
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F.E.B. Força Expedicionária Brasileira
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10th Mountain Division
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92nd Infantry Division "Bufalo"
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442nd Regimental Combat Team
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Partigiani
Irma-Anty 
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Stragi
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Musei, Parchi e Centri di documentazione

Go for Broke!

"Go for Broke!" era il motto del 442nd Regimental Combat Team che è diventato un sito internet interessante ricco di spunti e soprattutto di interviste ai reduci.

 

Hanno prodotto anche il documentario "A Tradition of Honor" (il trailer - RealPlayer)


Ma "Go for Broke!" è anche un flim prodotto nel 1951, è visibile su Youtube in 11 parti

Robert Pirosh wrote and directed this little-known World War II drama from MGM that commemorates the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, a combat unit composed of Japanese-Americans who fought valiantly during World War II, with many of the actual veterans of the combat unit appearing as actors in the film. For the most part, the film follows the standard Battleground plot line -- there is Sam (Lane Nakano), the wise sergeant; Chick (George Miki), a lazy private; the enervating Ohhara (Henry Oyasato); and Tommy (Henry Nakamura), a crack sharpshooter. Van Johnson plays Lt. Michael Grayson, a bigoted Texan assigned to shape these men into a fighting unit and who learns to respect their valor and bravery.

Go for Broke 1/11

 


Un altro interessante documentario è "Behind barbed wire" (1997)

 
"Riveting . . . a stirring story of the human spirit." --Joe Baltake, Sacramento Bee 
". . . a moving look at a neglected chapter in US history." --Kathleen Craughwell, Los Angeles Times 
Narrated by Noriyuki "Pat" Morita, this exceptional documentary outlines the W.W.II battlefield accomplishments of the 100th Infantry Battalion/442 Regimental Combat Team by featuring stories recounted by Japanese Americans who fought in these segregated units to prove their loyalty to their country. The ironies are not lost as the revelations unfold. As their civil liberties and rights were being stripped away and their families imprisoned in internment camps in the US, they faced further prejudice from the upper ranks of the military, in the trenches of Europe and in the Pacific Theatre. Personal accounts begin with the bombing of Pearl Harbor, continue through Italy and France, building to the rescue of the Texas "Lost Battalion" in northern France. Also included are the recollections of the little known MIS (Military Intelligence Service) linguists who served in the Pacific interrogating POWs, intercepting radio messages and translating documents.
 

Infine segnaliamo il film "Only the brave" (2005), ora anche in DVD, (il trailer Quicktime)
 A portrait of war and prejudice, this motion picture takes a journey into the hearts and minds of the forgotten heroes of World War II - the all-volunteer, Japanese-American 100th/442nd Regimental Combat Team. In 1941, when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, there were 5,000 Japanese Americans serving in the U.S. Armed Forces. Overnight, these second-generation citizens were stripped of their official duties - simply because they looked like the enemy. On the mainland, 120,000 innocent men, women and children were rounded up and swept into remote internment camps, where they would remain behind barbed wire for the duration of the war. Determined to prove their loyalty, the discharged Hawaiian Territorial Guardsmen of Japanese descent successfully petitioned the U.S. government to allow them to serve. These 1400 Hawaiian Nisei (second-generation Japanese-Americans) became the 100th Infantry Battalion. In July 1943, after rigorous training, they were sent to North Africa, then Italy. Fiercely courageous, they suffered so many casualties the 100th was soon dubbed the "Purple Heart Battalion." In June 1944, they were joined by the 442nd - comprised of Nisei volunteers from the internment camps and Hawaii - and proceeded to liberate five towns in Northern Italy. That September, they were shipped to Southern France and freed three more towns, before being recruited for what would become one of the top ten most important battles of World War II - the impossibly-dangerous rescue of the Texas "Lost Battalion." Two hundred and seventy-five men of the Texas' 36th Division had been trapped for more than a week on a high plateau in France's Vosges Mountains, surrounded by 7000 experienced German soldiers. Allied planes tried dropping them food and ammo, but the supplies kept rolling out of reach down the ridge. When attempts by much larger regular-Army units failed to break through, the 100th/442nd was ordered to finish the job. Though their ranks were already decimated and the Nisei were unimaginably exhausted, they spent four days and nights in brutal uphill hand-to-hand combat - while suffering frostbite and trench foot so severe they could hardly walk. The Nisei saved 211 out of the 275 Texans, but suffered more than 800 casualties of their own. During two years of combat, their extraordinary valor resulted in an unparalleled 21 Medals of Honor, 9486 Purple Hearts, eight Presidential Citations, 53 Distinguished Service Crosses, 588 Silver Stars and 5200 Bronze Star Medals - making them the most decorated unit of their size and length of service in American military history. The 100th/442nd as seen through the eyes of the men who lived it.
 

Only the Brave

 

 

The Better Part - The 442nd Regimental Combat Team