Truth About the Sword Hunt by the U.S. Army / 3 Million Japanese Swords Seized, ww2

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  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2024
  • Did you know that after World War II, under the General Headquarters (GHQ) in Japan, millions of Japanese swords, including national treasures, were lost due to the weapon confiscation known as "Sword Hunt"? For the Japanese, these Katanas were not just weapons but also represented their spirituality. The loss of these Katanas deeply saddened many Japanese people. In this video, we will uncover the truth about the GHQ's Sword Hunt, the famous national treasure Katanas that were taken away, and the story of
    an American army commander who saved many of these Katanas from the confiscation.
    00:00 Opening
    00:50 Japan's Defeat and the GHQ's Sword Hunt
    06:43 The Katana as a Symbol of Spirituality
    09:35 Lost and Saved Famous Swords
    16:32 Dr. Walter Ames Compton

Komentáře • 84

  • @d.pierce.6820
    @d.pierce.6820 Před 2 měsíci +16

    Huge numbers of these "lost" swords were taken back to the US, UK, and Australia by returning soldiers, where they are still "coming out of the woodwork" even today. I'm a Japanese sword collector, and my main supplier is still constantly finding new "stashes" of these swords that were originally brought back by soldiers, and have only just now come to light again, found in attics and closets by family members. Japanese swords were a highly sought-after souvenir after the war, and during the Occupation period-so much in demand that Gen. MacArthur actually authorized a Japanese swordmaking company to produce swords for sale in Army PX stores during the Occupation, when all other swordmaking was forbidden.

    • @gf2390
      @gf2390 Před 2 měsíci +5

      It would be amazing to move into an old house and find one in the attic huh.
      I've seen many of them pop up on Nihonto Message Board

    • @helixator3975
      @helixator3975 Před měsícem +3

      My brothers inherited one that was made around the time of the Russo Japanese war, though taken in WW2 in New Guinea. It’s no ancient masterpiece, but well above much of what was turned out thirty years later. You can see others like it, along with captured pistols, rifles, machine guns, mortars and artillery pieces, in RSL clubs all over Australia.

  • @cruz68
    @cruz68 Před 2 měsíci +10

    Such a shame so many swords were destroyed confiscated or lost but at least they were able to save some of them.

  • @aragmarverilian8238
    @aragmarverilian8238 Před 2 měsíci +16

    Dumped into the ocean... Indeed, that was a hard watch.

    • @whiskeymonk4085
      @whiskeymonk4085 Před měsícem +5

      Just like our boys who were dumped in the ocean.

  • @mikemckague9506
    @mikemckague9506 Před 2 měsíci +9

    Thank you Colonel Cadwell for helping preserve some of these important blades

  • @davidtran3610
    @davidtran3610 Před 2 měsíci +11

    I have 2 Wakizashis, 1 from the Muromachi era 1400-1500 and 1 from the Kamakura era 1200-1300. I accidentally had cut my finger today with the Muromachi one 🤦🏻‍♂️ 500 years old and still cuts like it was made yesterday. Never again

  • @jrnash5329
    @jrnash5329 Před měsícem +4

    Swords don't kill people ,
    People kill people
    Victors make the rules & get to write the history.
    This is a very interesting piece thank you

  • @aaronmatheson9730
    @aaronmatheson9730 Před 2 měsíci +7

    This is going to be a tough watch! I hate looking at those piles of swords going “who knows where”, a good percentage were destroyed .

    • @gf2390
      @gf2390 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Totally agree

    • @aaronmatheson9730
      @aaronmatheson9730 Před 2 měsíci +3

      @@gf2390 most would think its crazy how I need to psych myself up to watch post ww11 sword hunt. I have had such a reverence for Japanese since I started martial arts in the early 80’s. I am aware that my reasons are a bit selfish , thinking “ I could have gone through those piles and they would be in good hands”. And knowing my Grandfather fought in Burma and the South Pacific at the end of the war against the emperor army. I was not one of the lucky ones that was able to have a relative bring one back from the theatre. I understand people would look at this post negatively, I am just being honest. I guess not having a real nihonto handed to me gave me the drive to be able to forge my own blades as I am generally not happy with “most” replicas. Sorry for the rambling, this may have been cathartic for me lol!!!

    • @treystephens6166
      @treystephens6166 Před měsícem

      How many Americans were killed with those swords ⚔️⁉️

    • @aaronmatheson9730
      @aaronmatheson9730 Před měsícem +2

      @@treystephens6166 not near as many Chinese. A few of my fellow Canadians I would guess.

    • @treystephens6166
      @treystephens6166 Před měsícem

      @@aaronmatheson9730 Canada 🇨🇦 had a hand 🖐🏻 in the Pacific War ⁉️🇯🇵💥🇺🇸

  • @bennyhonda6056
    @bennyhonda6056 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Very well researched and objectively presented. Thank you.

  • @gf2390
    @gf2390 Před 2 měsíci +13

    Out of the handfull of swords I own I chose one of the nicest swords and gave it to a Japanese friend because I felt it belonged with him.
    He was one of the greatest men ive met.

  • @user-zs5nr8dd1z
    @user-zs5nr8dd1z Před měsícem +5

    I don't care what the swords represented to the Japanese soldiers. They got far less for starting the war than the allies would have got for losing it had the allies lost it.

    • @direwolfy1470
      @direwolfy1470 Před měsícem

      They would have done America just like they did China. They made the Nazis look like girl scouts. Anyone who knows history shouldn't feel bad for them.

  • @andrewstraub131
    @andrewstraub131 Před měsícem +4

    Man they are lucky they weren’t all melted down by the great atomic forge from the sky . The fact that we let them keep their emperor is kinda shameful

  • @LancelotChan
    @LancelotChan Před 2 měsíci +5

    I'm glad you did not victimize the whole event and presented this in a fair light. :)

  • @tushkafilms1061
    @tushkafilms1061 Před měsícem +3

    Leonard Siffleet, a World War Two Australian Commando was a prisoner of war, and was murder with one of these sword. It of course wasn’t the swords fault, as it is a tool, but the criminal wielding it.

  • @jackscott5465
    @jackscott5465 Před měsícem +2

    I used to do work for a WW2 Hero Mr. Wells who had one in his gun cabinet. I told him a story I had read in the Tulsa World about a Katana being repatriated to the surviving Japanese family members. He told me he had to trade an M-1 round to a Japanese leutenant and no one was getting it back off him. Mr. Wells was a wonderful MAN yet he is gone now. One of his Sons might be willing to part with it? EXcellent history lesson am now very curious. Thanks.

  • @xtxt9135
    @xtxt9135 Před 2 měsíci +3

    More than a few US soldiers that passed through australia took home aftermarket swords.

  • @manchagojohnsonmanchago6367
    @manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Most swords were cut to peices.. 80% of them or more

  • @Colin-Fenix
    @Colin-Fenix Před měsícem +3

    The Japanese were brutal to prisoners of war and don’t deserve to keep the katanas!

  • @artawhirler
    @artawhirler Před měsícem +2

    I have often wondered what happened to the swords that were owned and used by Miyamoto Musashi. Does anyone know if they still exist?

  • @mikegimenez2629
    @mikegimenez2629 Před měsícem +2

    My family has a Sword that was won in battle in Okinawa. That sword is not going anywhere my wife's uncle fought a bloody battle and won. So it's hard won war trophy. Sorry is this upsets any apologists. The sword was verified many times by experts as being over 200 years old.

  • @richmondlandersenfells2238

    Just to add some facts, the majority of those swords are not katanas. Rather they're actually called gunto. And most of these guntos are not traditionally hand made. Some guntos from the early 1900s are sabres with D shaped hand guard which is very exotic for a japanese sword.

  • @Mike-mp8co
    @Mike-mp8co Před 2 měsíci +2

    My grandfather had one with a piece of buckshot in it.

  • @joeschlepp
    @joeschlepp Před 2 měsíci +3

    I believe that the number of historical Samurai katana's passed down thru time by relatives of officers during WW2 were limited.
    the vast majority of katana's issued to officers during WW2 were mass produced for the war. they were of no value.

    • @LancelotChan
      @LancelotChan Před 2 měsíci +2

      many used family heirloom as their gunto blade that was because they thought they were fighting for family glory.

    • @d.pierce.6820
      @d.pierce.6820 Před 2 měsíci +2

      I have about 20-30 WW2 Japanese Officers swords in my collection. About half of them have old, traditionally-made blades in them. There were plenty of swordsmiths hand-forging blades all during the war,too.

    • @email4664
      @email4664 Před 2 měsíci

      Many of the captured destroyed swords in General Population Japan were heirlooms, and in fact, many in combat were as well. I have a wall of them here

    • @alenahubbard1391
      @alenahubbard1391 Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​@@LancelotChanMaybe but the vast majority were mass produced junk blades.

  • @alvinmasias5529
    @alvinmasias5529 Před 22 dny

    We have found one of this oldest katana in our province in leyte

  • @BadlydrawnBen
    @BadlydrawnBen Před 2 měsíci +4

    My grandfathers brother fought the Japanese in WW2 he had a Japanese sword he brought back it was used for wood splitting and other garden tasks then some relative took it when he died . His hatred of Japan and the Japanese was absolute I remember as a kid my father got. Japanese company car and if we visited we had to park it away from his house I would hate to think of the things he saw

    • @treystephens6166
      @treystephens6166 Před měsícem

      Do you think the Japanese are naturally murderous ⁉️🇯🇵⚔️

  • @formerice
    @formerice Před měsícem

    My dad brought 2 back that he got in the Philippines. Both were covered in blood. He never said who's blood. Brought 2 Arisakas as well.

  • @Ulfgarius
    @Ulfgarius Před měsícem

    Interesting how japan had an accepted culture of capturing the swords of a defeated enemy for hundreds of years but once they were defeated the swords were "stolen".

  • @tylerbryanhead
    @tylerbryanhead Před měsícem +10

    I'd say a few lost swords pales in comparison to the atrocities committed by the Japanese.

  • @justdoingitjim7095
    @justdoingitjim7095 Před měsícem

    To the victor goes the spoils of war! Always has been, always will be!

  • @loneranger5349
    @loneranger5349 Před měsícem

    What did they expect was going to happen 😳 🤔

  • @ridermak4111
    @ridermak4111 Před měsícem

    Before 1939, let’s talk about years of horrific torture,
    s. assault, and murder of Chinese men, women, and children.
    WW II started way before ‘39
    for them.

  • @user-so1mv9po2f
    @user-so1mv9po2f Před měsícem

    No Hatori Hanso swords? Hat ta ta ta tat!

  • @raphlvlogs271
    @raphlvlogs271 Před měsícem

    the US would have made a ton of money if they sold all those sword confiscated

  • @MrDelta8871
    @MrDelta8871 Před měsícem +5

    Let's not forget the damn Japanese started this fight with ruthless brutality at Pearl Harbor. I have zero sympathy for lost swords or nuclear bombs dropped. If you poke the bear and then get bitten, it's your fault not the bears.

  • @Jeff250lbc
    @Jeff250lbc Před měsícem +4

    Should be a federal US law not one sword should be returned to Japan ever. They lost.

  • @oddish3022
    @oddish3022 Před měsícem

    oh no they lost their swords
    meanwhile the rest of southeast Asia was brutalized by Japan 💀

  • @rickybobby2444
    @rickybobby2444 Před 2 měsíci +3

    3 million lost samurai 3 million lost ninja is the way I see it

  • @alenahubbard1391
    @alenahubbard1391 Před 2 měsíci +26

    Most of those destroyed swords were mass produced junk. And considering Japans crimes against humanity during the war, fully equal to the Nazis, I'm not going to cry over some lost blades.

    • @whiskeymonk4085
      @whiskeymonk4085 Před měsícem +7

      WAY worse than the Nazis.

    • @peters9929
      @peters9929 Před měsícem

      Australian POWs where treated badly by these B#stards , swords where of no importance

    • @williampinchers
      @williampinchers Před měsícem

      It’s funny how people keep on and on about the Nazi and Japanese, you always seem to forget the USA holocaust of the native Americans , the so called land of the free were people today are still on reservations.

    • @user-wi9rf1zx5b
      @user-wi9rf1zx5b Před 27 dny +1

      Way worse of the Nazis where the americans in all wars starting from the american indian wars. Educate yourself before you open your mouth. Check also the My Lai massacre

    • @richmondlandersenfells2238
      @richmondlandersenfells2238 Před 22 dny +1

      I want that blade! And am ecurently building a small collection of it!

  • @JG-tt4sz
    @JG-tt4sz Před měsícem

    America lost a lot of manufacturing jobs to Japan. We're even.

  • @jamesruffner5488
    @jamesruffner5488 Před měsícem +1

    Who cares?

  • @user-mn6li2yv4d
    @user-mn6li2yv4d Před měsícem +4

    Of course it will be stolen. Like tell me plz what is in America and Europe that is not stolen from other nations? 😂

  • @a1k078
    @a1k078 Před měsícem

    They did the same to the Philippines. It was called Pershing's sword/blade hunt when the U.S. was pacifying the Philippines. We lost our KAMPILANS, AND GINUNTINGS, AND OUR BUTTERFLY KNIVES WERE MADE WELL KNOWN!!!

  • @bobrogers7004
    @bobrogers7004 Před měsícem

    At least they couldn't be used to commit further atrocities.

  • @peppironee4736
    @peppironee4736 Před 2 měsíci +8

    They owe us those sword for Pearl Harbor fucked around and found out also they folded like lawn chair 🤣🤣🤣

    • @PhuongPham77708
      @PhuongPham77708 Před měsícem +2

      I mean…. they did get provoked by the US to attack 🙄

    • @steveolson69
      @steveolson69 Před měsícem

      @@PhuongPham77708really ,and I suppose the Chinese provoked them and the phillipins and all the other country's they tried to take over . Or the fliers and soldiers they ate because their upper echelon figured they could grow food instead of supplying them with rice and booze for their officers!

    • @steveolson69
      @steveolson69 Před měsícem

      Katanas are not just weapons? No and guns aren't just weapons either but America is trying to save itself by confiscating our firearms like Australia did. Did it stop any killings by crazy people ? No ! They still have knife attacks just like in UK. SO CUT THE TIPS OFF KNIVES LIKE IN UK ? Yeah and what about the edges? Do you just flatten the edge or then what about the hammers people kill with ? When do you stop blaming the tools and not the weirder?