NPR Interview - All Things Considered for PBS Sakura & Pearls: Healing from WW2

 

I did an interview for NPR’s All Things Considered about the PBS Special Sakura & Pearls: Healing from World War II. In the interview, I’m transparent about my fears in bringing together former enemies to speak face to face. The cultural tensions and the wounds of WWII were a challenging. Hear more about the struggles and the surprising results in the full NPR interview (~5 mins) here:

https://www.kunm.org/post/film-brings-together-hiroshima-and-pearl-harbor-survivors

Scroll Down for NPR Interview Transcript:

Sakura & Pearls is available on PBS Video on Demand. Click to STREAM IT NOW

NPR INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT:

PBS will premiere a new documentary Thursday, October 28 at 7 p.m. that explores forgiveness after war. It brings together atomic bomb survivors from Japan with those who lived through the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. G.K. Hunter, the director of the film,“Sakura & Pearls: Healing From World War II,” says the title refers to cherry blossoms, or sakura, which represent the rebirth of Hiroshima, and the pearls represent the pearls of wisdom of Pearl Harbor.

G.K. HUNTER: So it really is a hopeful film. And the reason that I did it is because I wanted to know how far had healing happened, you know we’re 75, 80 years from World War II, and I wanted to see how we forgiven each other.

KUNM: Had any survivors of both Pearl Harbor and the atomic bombs in Japan ever formally come together before this?

HUNTER: In 2016, there was a commemoration with the then-Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and former US President Obama. And they visited both Hiroshima and the USS Arizona at Pearl Harbor to commemorate the fallen. And during this time there was a meeting, informal meetings, but they weren’t the face-to-face meetings that I was looking for. So after the 2016 commemoration, I said, ‘Well, we need to follow up on this. We need to sit them down face to face, let both of them tell their stories in front of their former enemies and really get to the heart of this.’ We needed to go deeper to see if we had forgiven each other.

KUNM: And where did you have them meet?

HUNTER: We met at the Pearl Harbor Visitor Center. There’s a meeting room there with the view of the USS Arizona. We had two atomic bomb survivors fly out from Hiroshima. We had two Pearl Harbor Visitor Center educators, who are also Pearl Harbor survivors. And that’s what the film really centers on. Capturing that exclusive meeting between former enemies.

KUNM: Was it difficult to arrange? Did they want to do it?

HUNTER: It all came together the last minute. I was a nail biter, I’ll tell you, I’m like, ‘Am I crazy for even thinking of getting people of these generations to meet each other after such a hard history? What’s going to happen?’ I really didn’t know what was going to happen, and what they did was nothing short of inspiring.

KUNM: What was the conversation like for you watching it unfold.

HUNTER: I was nervous. I’ll be honest, because if something went wrong, it’s all my fault because I’m the one who invited them to come here. There’s all sorts of customs, which I’m learning, and I’m still learning about Japanese culture. But I was absolutely humbled and surprised by how forthcoming they were, how uncensored they spoke, even though they were showing visible respect to their former adversaries, they really pulled no punches. They said, ‘I hated you guys. This is what it felt like for my house to be blown up. I was in the hospital for eight months and then redeployed. I was a little kid on the shores of Pearl Harbor, and the zeros are flying over my head, and I was scared from my life.’ They just came out and they said it and they retold both events. And while they’re retelling it, we got the historic footage and we show the atomic bombs being dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. We show the attack on Pearl Harbor because we want the future generations to know exactly what happened so we can learn from it.

KUNM: Why is it important today to tell these stories? What do you hope people will take away from this?

HUNTER: I hope that there’s three things that people take away from this. One, that what we’ve previously thought was unforgivable actually, people have found forgiveness for them. Two, hope that former enemies can come together and truly be friends, not only in title but in actual relationships. And three, I think we can prevent future global conflicts, especially around the Pacific Rim, which is in the news a lot lately. If we listen to our elders, listen to what they felt were mistakes, listen to what they thought was necessary and stopped repeating history. We don’t need another global conflict. And if we listen to these four elders, we won’t do it if we listen to their advice.

KUNM: G.K. Hunter, thank you for talking with me. Thank you for this film.

HUNTER: Thank you very much for having me.

Essential Links for George Kamana Hunter, Healing Our Bloodlines, and Sakura & Pearls

Hear my NPR All Things Considered Interview: https://www.kunm.org/term/gk-hunter

Stream my PBD Documentary Sakura & Pearls: Healing from World War II here: https://gkhunter.com/

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JGXsLbfStmY

My IMDB Page: https://www.imdb.com/name/nm11014157/

Read Healing Our Bloodlines Book Blog: https://healingourbloodlines.blogspot.com/

Author Amazon Profile: https://www.amazon.com/G.-K.-Hunter/e/B07X8QVGS9?ref_=dbs_p_pbk_r00_abau_000000

Author Blog: https://gkhunter.com/

Amazon Book Link: https://www.amazon.com/Healing-Our-Bloodlines-Realizations-Generational/dp/1734009209

Amazon Kindle Link: https://www.amazon.com/Healing-Our-Bloodlines-Realizations-Generational-ebook/dp/B07X9YTR7Z/ref=sr_1_2?keywords=g.+k.+hunter&qid=1636728383&qsid=147-7880794-7338715&sr=8-2&sres=1734009209%2CB07X9YTR7Z%2C0198122136%2CB07M714NDH%2CB00BGGGOS4%2C0748602666%2C0140801359%2CB00AXH0MMQ%2C0174435835%2CB0000CMYDY%2CB00HOORKIA%2CB08KWK7DCH%2CB00K2EOONI%2CB099R6G41B%2CB09D1GJKVG%2C0515133876&srpt=ABIS_EBOOKS

Sakura & Pearls Documentary Blog: https://sakuraandpearls.com/

Liberate Hollywood Blog: https://liberateyourself.com/blog/

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/g.k.hunter.3

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gkhunterspeaks/

Pinterest https://www.pinterest.com/gkhunterspeaks/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/gkhunterspeaks

Linked In: https://www.linkedin.com/in/george-kamana-hunter-g-k-hunter-013b054b

Triberr: https://triberr.com/pages/profile.php?pid=17269

GoFundMe: https://www.gofundme.com/f/sakura-pearls

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/50218761-healing-our-bloodlines?from_search=true&from_srp=true&qid=TKZY1imAcI&rank=3

Author Profile on Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/profile/view/GKHunter

Walmart Book Profile: https://www.walmart.com/ip/Healing-Our-Bloodlines-The-8-Realizations-of-Generational-Liberation-Paperback/413733315

Author Barnes and Noble Profile: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/healing-our-bloodlines-g-k-hunter/1133345374?ean=9781734009200

 

Published by

G. K. Hunter

George Kamana Hunter is the Director of the PBS Documentary Sakura & Pearls: Healing from World War II, which exclusively captures a special meeting between US Pearl Harbor Attack Survivors and Japanese Atomic Bomb Survivors at Pearl Harbor. He is the Author of Healing Our Bloodlines: The 8 Realizations of Generational Liberation, a guidebook on how to break free from the cycles of abuse. It was inspired by his 20 years of working with clients, including true stories from Jewish Holocaust Survivors, Native American Veterans, the homeless, immigrant families and Irish Americans who descended from the Potato Famine. It was written for people of all ethnic and religious backgrounds. When he’s not making movies, writing books, or giving inspirational talks, he can be found surfing pristine waves in Hawaii and throughout the Americas. View all posts by G. K. Hunter

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The 2nd Realization of Generational Healing

G. K. Hunter on Evertalk TV