Mar 4, 2015
BATAVIA — Although the film “Unbroken” was not nominated for Best Picture for this year’s Academy Awards Ceremony scheduled for Sunday, the story of a American soldier surviving a World War II Japanese prisoner of war camp resonated with Edward Grabowski and his Introduction to Criminal Justice students at Genesee Community College. While the film captures the extraordinary life and survival of Louis Zamperini, Grabowski’s father survived the horrors of a Japanese POW camp, and experienced his own hellish encounters with some of the guards, including the notorious Watanabe, the brutal guard known as “The Bird” who tortured and killed many prisoners. When Grabowski happened to mention this coincidence to his students, they wanted to know more. And when he told them he had a photograph of his father standing behind two Japanese guards, one likely “The Bird,” his students wanted to see it. “They found it interesting so I brought in some of the historic materials about my father to share,” Grabowski said. The photograph taken by a French photographer shows Leo J. Grabowski standing in a doorway unnoticed by the two prison guards who are in the foreground holding their rifles. “I am 99 percent sure that the guard standing is Watanabe,” Grabowski said. “My father said he would have been brutally beaten by those guards if they had known he was in the photograph.” Sgt. Leo Grabowski served in the U.S. Army from 1932-45, and was one of the defenders of Bataan and Corregidor as part of the 31st Infantry at Fort Santiago in Manila. Captured by the Japanese, Grabowski survived the 60-mile Bataan Death March through the Philippine jungles to Camp O’Donnell. From there he was among the thousands transferred in overloaded freight cars, and he was eventually shipped to Mitsushima, a prisoner of war camp northwest of Tokyo where prisoners provided slave labor to construct the Hiraoka Dam. Like Zamperini in “Unbroken,” Grabowski senior made it home bearing the scars of a POW, but he put together a meaningful post-war life with a career and having a family, including three children. His youngest son, Edward, spent 27 years teaching criminal justice at BOCES, and is now adjunct faculty member at GCC. Upon request, he reflects on his father’s military distinctions with quiet pride, sharing a little of that tortured past through books, photos and clippings from decades-old newspapers. In doing so, he is giving his students a sense of world history, not from the silver screen of Hollywood or a text book, but from the connection of family and the bond of father and son. Article from The Daily News and taken from http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/news/article_787f65d0-b842-11e4-b51c-d75ee76b6a9e.html