Official Site of the U.S. Air Force   Right Corner Banner
Join the Air Force

News > Coming home: Children of Pearl Harbor attacks tour former home on Hickam
 
Photos
Previous ImageNext Image
Coming Home: children of the attacks tour former home on Hickam
Deloris Anderson and Larry Bush pose for a photo Dec. 5, 2011, in front of the U.S.flag that was flown at Hickam Field during the attack Dec. 7, 1941. As children of an Airman stationed at Hickam Field, the siblings, who were only 5- and 8-years-old, were home Dec. 7. 1941, and survived the sudden attacks by the Japanese. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Jerome S. Tayborn)
Download HiRes
Coming home: Children of Pearl Harbor attacks tour former home on Hickam

Posted 12/7/2011   Updated 12/6/2011 Email story   Print story

    


by Master Sgt. Mike Hammond
Pacific Air Forces Public Affairs


12/7/2011 - JOINT BASE PEARL HARBOR-HICKAM, Hawaii (AFNS) -- As children of an Airman stationed at Hickam Field, Hawaii, Larry Bush and Deloris Anderson were at home the fateful morning of Dec. 7, 1941, during the surprise Japanese attack. Today, 70 years later, they finally came home.

The house where some of their earliest childhood memories were formed and some of their most enduring fears were born is still standing, like they are. And the opportunity to step back in time came during a visit to Hickam Field, now Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, ahead of the 70th Anniversary commemoration of the attacks on U.S. military forces stationed on Oahu.

On this bright, sunny, and slightly breezy Hawaiian day, an Airman and his wife opened the doors of their home, and welcomed the pair and their extended family members for a personal tour of the quarters they called home the morning of the surprise attack.

Master Sgt. Dimitri Xadzipulos and his wife, Concetta, now occupy the historic quarters, and quickly agreed to host the family during their visit.

The brother and sister pair left Oahu during evacuations in February 1942. Bush, who visited the island last year, and Anderson, who made her first return in 70 years, found many familiar sights at their former home and also said much had changed over the years.

As Concetta Xadzipulos walked them through the hallway, they looked into a small closet.

"My sister and I were stuck in that closet," Bush said.

"Well, we weren't very big then!" his sister added, as they were only 5- and 8-years old at the time.

But the significance of this visit was far more than a trip down memory lane for the pair. It brought back thoughts of the family that once was.

Their father, Master Sgt. Gerald Bush, was a telecommunications expert on Hickam Field that morning and helped restore and protect communications lines during and after the attack. He shipped off to fight in the European Theater of World War II, not long after the family left Hawaii.

"This is the last place we lived as a family," Bush said, his voice cracking with emotion. "Because after we were evacuated, my dad went to (World War II) and we never saw him after that. He didn't make it back. He died in November 1944 -- right before the Battle of the Bulge. So that's very, very, emotional."

Both Bush and Anderson said the effects of the attack on Oahu remained with them throughout their lives. According to Bush, a car backfiring 23 years later, in 1964, caused him to tell his wife to get out of the car. "I thought they were shooting at us!" he said.

Anderson, to this day, startles at loud, booming noises. "Thunderstorms are what bother me," she said.

For the Airmen of today, the visit was a way to personally meet history. The Xadzipuloses said they welcomed the opportunity to meet the people who, as young children, once survived flying bullets and shrapnel in their home.

"We had no idea about the history of our home, so it was an easy decision to have them over and we are thrilled!" Dimitri Xadzipulos said. "They lived part of history, and it is a historical event for them and for us to have them come back."

 



tabComments
No comments yet.  
Add a comment

 Inside AF.mil

ima cornerSearch

tabSubscribe AF.MIL
tabMore HeadlinesRSS feed 
Davis-Monthan Airmen work to end veteran homelessness by 2015

Jennies to jets to stealth: Bomb wing turns 90

Concentration camp survivor to fighter pilot: 'Freedom a beautiful thing'  5

Wounded warriors adapt, overcome at Andrews sports camp

Pilots, combat systems officers may be eligible for retention incentives   2

Alert Reaper Airmen find IED  1

Luke AFB F-16 crashes, pilots safely eject  4

AF drops 50,000 plus gallons of retardant on Colorado fires

352nd SOG welcomes Osprey to fleet

SecDef: DOD welcomes Supreme Court decision  37

Weather warns warriors, saves services silver  1

Squadron's lone female gunner aims high  4

Flight engineer reaches combat sortie milestone  4

Training helps deployed Airman save lives  2

tabCommentaryRSS feed 
Our commitment, our community

'Lucky' people take personal responsibility for their own success  16


Site Map      Contact Us     Questions     USA.gov     Security and Privacy notice     E-publishing  
Suicide Prevention      Sexual Assault Awareness & Prevention     FOIA     IG   EEO