Press "Enter" to skip to content

Local Pearl Harbor vet arrives at National WWII Museum in time for 105th birthday and rousing tribute

Redondo Beach resident and America’s oldest living Pearl Harbor survivor Joseph Eskenazi, made it safely to the National WII Museum in New Orleans, following his two day Amtrak voyage from Los Angeles’ Union Station.

“It feels great,” Eskenazi told the Associated Press after posing for pictures with his great-grandson, who is about to turn 5, his 21-month-old great-granddaughter and six other World War II veterans, all in their 90s.

He was greeted on Wednesday morning, June. 11, by flag waving fans and appreciators who lined up outside the museum to wish him a happy 105th birthday. Eskenazi traveled to New Orleans through the Gary Sinise Foundation’s Soaring Valor Program, which helps bring WII veterans from across the country to the national museum.

While at the museum, Eskenazi and eight other Southern California based veterans will record their memories of WWII with a historian sponsored by the foundation.

of

Expand

Eskenazi, who will turn 105 on Jan. 30, was just 23 years old when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. Still, not a day goes by when he doesn’t wake up thinking of the young Americans killed in the attack, Eskenazi said at his Union Station sendoff on Friday, Jan. 6.

“The thing that bothered me most is to see those wonderful people go into another world without getting a chance to enjoy this one,” he said. “That’s a moment of sadness that is going to be with me for the rest of my life.”

More than 2,403 Americans perished in the attack, including 68 civilians.

Eskenazi was a private first class sleeping at the Schofield Barracks on the morning of Dec. 7, 1941. He was jolted awake by the sounds of the first bombs detonating on the USS Arizona, which was located around 18 miles from his inland barracks.

When his captain asked for a volunteer to help clear the airfield adjacent to the harbor, Eskenazi’s hand was the first, and only, to shoot up.

While driving a bulldozer across the open field he survived being shot at by a deadly Japanese Zero fighter plane. The machine gun bullets kicked up dirt around Eskenazi, but luckily, did not meet their target.

Eskenazi will be sharing this story, among other wartime memories, at the museum. These recordings will be preserved in the museum’s oral history archives so that feature generations remember the bravery and sacrifice of men like Eskenazi.

World War II veteran Joseph Eskenazi, center, who at 104 years and 11 months old is the oldest living veteran to survive the attack on Pearl Harbor, sits with fellow Pearl Harbor veterans, at an event celebrating his upcoming 105th birthday at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023. Left to right are Wallace Johnson, Gordon Wilson, Eskenazi, Billy Hall and Tony DiLisa. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)
World War II veteran Joseph Eskenazi, center, who at 104 years and 11 months old is the oldest living veteran to survive the attack on Pearl Harbor, sits with fellow Pearl Harbor veterans, at an event celebrating his upcoming 105th birthday at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023. Left to right are Wallace Johnson, Gordon Wilson, Eskenazi, Billy Hall and Tony DiLisa. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

 

In New Orleans on Wednesday, Eskenazi and his fellow veterans lined up for pictures amid exhibits of World War II aircraft and Higgins boats, designed for beach landings.

“Thank you guys for providing us a country that was worth fighting for,” veteran Billy Hall, a who rose to the rank of major in the Marines after enlisting in 1941, shouted to well-wishers.

The museum opened in 2000 as the National D-Day Museum and has expanded in size and scope since then.

The Associated Press contributed to this report


Source: Orange County Register

Be First to Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *