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Guy Gabaldon: Saipan’s Pied Piper

Lexi Zotomayor by Lexi Zotomayor
4 years ago
in War in the Pacific
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Guy Gabaldon

The surrender of 1,500 soldiers and civilians and soldiers on Saipan in 1944 was attributed to WWII veteran Guy Gabaldon, who convinced hundreds to lay down their arms and capitulate to the Americans.

Guy, the “Pied Piper of Saipan,” was recommended for a Medal of Honor. He received a Navy Cross.

He was 17 when he enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps. He trained at Camp Pendleton and was subsequently assigned to the 2nd Regiment, Second Marine Division.

Having lived with first-generation Japanese immigrants in Los Angeles, California, Guy picked up the language which would later served an asset once he got to the island of Saipan.

His first night on island, he immediately buckled down to doing what he felt he had to do. He worked alone and brought back two prisoners with him on account of his “backstreet Japanese.”

As he found his way in the labyrinthine paths in the Saipan jungles, he overheard a band of Japanese soldiers talking about a major attack on the Americans. With this, he was able to foil what could have been a huge toll on the American forces.

In one of their operations near the cliffs, Guy was faced with the most heartrending sight: seeing Japanese civilians jumping off the cliff by the numbers. What was even more horrific for Guy to see were adults hurling babies and children to their deaths despite their pleas to spare them.

In an interview with War Times Journal, Guy said, “It was sad to see children struggling with their parents pleading not to be thrown off the cliffs.”

“Please father, do not kill me. I do not want to die!” were the words of the children begging for their lives.

Instinct led Guy and his comrade to stop them from jumping.

He told WTJ, “One group was about two hundred yards away from us. I shouted at them as we ran. ‘Tomare, tomare – seppuku shinaide. Kodomo korosanaide. Dozo, korosanaide!’  I’m begging them to stop killing their children. But I can see that as we approach they jump off in greater numbers. ‘Hurley, stop. If we get any closer they’ll all jump off. I’ll try talking to them again.”

But their fear of the Americans fueled by a propaganda made them face their deaths.

At the stockade, Guy met a woman whom he saved from the cliff. It was one of those poignant images of the war—the woman who killed her own child unnecessarily over her fear the Americans would roast and eat the children—lost her mind and was looking ahead.

Guy told WSJ, “My God, what a pathetic sight. I should have let her join her baby that day at the cliffs. This was truly the horror of war”

These horrific scenes of the war and his exploits in the jungles would later be dramatized in the movie, “Hell to Eternity.” Later, his life would be immortalized in, “EAST L.A. MARINE: THE UNTOLD TRUE STORY OF GUY.”

Guy and his family lived on Saipan for two decades.

U.S. Marine PFC Guy Lewis Gabaldon died of a heart attack in his Florida home on August 31, 2006.   He was 80.

His ashes were spread on Mt. Tapochau.

Tags: JapanMarianasMarinesPied PiperSaipan
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Lexi Zotomayor

Lexi Zotomayor

She lived on Saipan, in the Northern Marianas Islands for 11 years as a full-time print journalist, PR specialist, magazine manager and advertising agency's production coordinator. She was active with Stellar Marianas, a non-profit organization that has been empowering young women in the Marianas. In 2014, she was chair of the media relations committee of the 70th Anniversary of the Battles of Saipan/Tinian. For her support of environmental causes, including the campaign for the designation of a vast swath of submerged lands and water in the Marianas as a national marine monument, she was Pew/Ocean Legacy Engaged Citizen Awardee in 2008. She has a BA degree in Asian Studies and was close to completing her MA in Asian Studies when she relocated to Saipan in 2004. She was a recipient of a scholarship grant from the Jose Rizal-Sun Yat Sen Society in 1994.

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