My father never talked about his experiences in the Navy during WWII until late in life. He was in his 80s when I learned he’d been on a destroyer off the coast of Normandy during D-Day and that his ship, the USS O’Brien, had been hit by a kamikaze pilot when the war shifted to the Pacific. He never glorified war or his role. Like so many men who served in WWII, he said that he hadn’t done anything special—he was just doing his job like everybody else.
WordSister Cynthia Kraack coauthored 40 Thieves on Saipan with Joseph Tachovsky, whose father Lieutenant Frank Tachovsky, led the elite Marine Scout-Sniper platoon known as the “40 Thieves.” The younger Tachovsky didn’t know the incredible scope of his father’s role until his father’s funeral, which sent him on a quest to learn more. In 2016, he came to Cynthia with hours of interviews with surviving platoon members, letters, and military research that he’d gathered.
During an informal interview with Cynthia I asked, “What was the story you wanted to tell?” She explained, “The book is a fairly accurate capture of the story I wanted to tell. Understandably, the old men he interviewed found it easier to talk about the lighter side of their Marine service—the jokes, the pranks, the exploits. They said a situation was tense without describing the conditions. Joe wanted to pay tribute to the men and we focused on a line of his father’s: ‘War makes men out of boys and old men out of young men.’ The 18-year-old who went to church with his family and had a last Sunday dinner at home before reporting for training would never come home. The man who came home would need time to rebuild his connection to living outside of war. I also found myself wanting to write a book that would help women understand war’s imprint on the men in their world.”
Last fall, I visited Omaha Beach and other sites associated with the D-Day invasion. Part of me understood that although I was hoping for a glimmer of Dad’s experience, I wouldn’t find it. There’s no way I could possibly understand what he went through. Maybe a soldier or sailor could, but not me.
I sensed that longing in Joe and Cynthia, whose father also served in the Navy in the Pacific Theater during WWII. As coauthors, their main focus in writing the book was to remember and honor the men known as the 40 Thieves. Ultimately, their work was personal, too. They hoped to gain insight into their fathers, access those younger men, honor and remember what they did. As coauthors, they have.
I also visited those sites. They are so beautiful and it’s almost impossible to imagine them filled with the carnage we know happened there. I have always wondered if one of the reasons so many men (and women) don’t talk about the dark aspects of war is because there simply are no words.
I’ve thought that too. How would my Dad have explained war to a kid?
My stepfather was a navigator in the Air Force and sat in the back of planes that dropped bombs in Japan. Like the men described here, he didn’t talk about it, but once he told me how conflicted he felt about dropping bombs but never seeing the destruction they were doing, cut off from the effects of his actions. I laud telling the stories of these veterans. We are the “silent generation,” that’s for sure, unless we give voice to these veterans.
Thanks for telling your stepfather’s story too
Sounds like a fascinating book. The people who fought in that war endured unimaginable stress, and so did their families back home. They were heroes, but then never asked to be treated as such.
I hope you’ll have a chance to read it. The things we ask young men (and now, women) to do in the name of country . . .