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14
Nov 2021
A lone Japanese soldier is buried among the war dead at Ripon Cemetery.
Private Sannosuke Nishimura's story reveals attitudes towards immigrants at the time, and how a pandemic cruelly cut short the lives of men who were returning from First World War battlefields.
Ripon resident and military historian Colin Oxley was in the cemetery and found a headstone of a soldier that bore the same surname as his unrelated wife Kazumi, who is from Japan, a country that had very little involvement in the war despite being an ally.
The couple used the internet to research how he came to be there and have shared what they discovered with the Stray Ferret.
Ms Nishimura said:
Sannosuke enlisted towards the end of the war in June 1918 and made the long sea journey to Europe.
There isn't information on where his battalion was deployed during the war, but he made it out alive.
Sannusuke's parents suffered greatly in the years after the war.
After Sannosuke's mum died in the 1930s, the Canadian government took the Nishimura's family home off them and sent his father to an internment camp in British Columbia where he died.
Japan was no longer an ally and 22,000 Japanese Canadians were locked up during World War Two in the name of national security.
Mr Oxley said:
Mr Oxley and Ms Nishimura could not find any living relatives. His younger brother Frank died in 2000 at the respectable age of 94.
Ms Nishimura added:
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