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About
- 1. Outline of the History of the Japanese Interned in Siberia
- 2. Reasons for the Silence
- 3. My Uncle was a Siberian Internee - Experience of My Family
- 4. What I Learned from the Japanese American Incarceration during WWll
- 5. For the Younger Generation
- 6. As Materials for the Acquisition of Japanese or English
- 7. Appreciation
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Takeo Kuba
- 1. Photos
- 2. Official Document as POW kept in Soviet
- 3. Internment Camp #13 & 14 Detainee Date of Arrival on Nov. 15 Questionnaire
- 4. Detainee Registration Card Kept in Soviet Union
- 5. Request of Work by Takeo 1950.3.20
- 6. Declaration of the Personal History for Reentry to Japan
- 7. Map of Russian Federation
- 8. Map of Maritime Provinces in Russia
- Camp Locations
- Paintings by Yoshida
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The Volga Far Away
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Chapter 1
- Announcement of the Important News (p.40)
- Increasing Disappointment and Wish to Go Home (p.42)
- Crossroads of Fate (p.45)
- Chaos in the Military Headquarter (p.48)
- Japan-Soviet Relationship During This Time (p.52)
- Detainees or Prisoners? (p.56)
- Handing Over Weapons and Ammunition (p.60)
- Escaping in the Dusk (p.63)
- Military Order at the Detention Facility (p.65)
- Going Home from Hungnam? (p.69)
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Chapter 2
- Cooking Red Beans with Dynamite (p.74)
- Life in the Tent at Kraskino (p.77)
- Strict Military Order of the Soviet Army (p.79)
- Travelling across Siberia on a Sardine-packed Train (p.86)
- “Meshiage” in the freight train (p.89)
- 55 Degrees Centigrade below Zero in the Freezing Weather (p.91)
- Prisoner's Train from the West to the East (p.93)
- Sunset over the Horizon (p.95)
- Interesting Group Psychology (p.98)
- Four-Day “Death March” (p.108)
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Chapter 3
- Gulag at the 55th Parallel North (p.116)
- Group of 10,000 Commissioned Officers (p.118)
- Company of Civil Officials and Civilians (p.120)
- Democratization and Delegate Meeting (p.124)
- Distribution of Sugar (p.133)
- Quota and Tabacco (p.136)
- Additional Food for the Amount of Labor (p.142)
- Toilet in the Severe Cold (p.144)
- Chapter 5
- Chapter 6
- Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
- Do Svidania (See You Again) (p.232)
- Boat Going Home to Maizuru (p.235)
- Returning to the Ministry of Finance (p.238)
- The Tragedy of the Volunteer Army in Manchuria and Mongolia (p.241)
- Forming of the Association of the Detainees (p.243)
- Complications of the Matters of Detainment (p.250)
- Doubt of the School Textbooks (p.253)
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Chapter 9
- Break Down of the Soviet (p.258)
- 初めてのモスコウ訪問 (p.261)
- モスコウの変貌 (p.265)
- Back Agan to Yelabuga (p.268)
- Memorial Monument Where Spirits of Comrades Rest (p.275)
- Grave Keeper Did Not Keep the Promise (p.278)
- A Gulag Is Now a Police School (p.280)
- Meeting the President in Kazan (p.284)
- Memorial Service at Khavarovsk (p.289)
- Continuing Symposium Between Japan and Russia (p.292)
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Appendix
- Demanding Apology and Compensation (p.295)
- Decision as I became the Director (p.297)
- 検討懇談会の発足 (p.299)
- The final settlement of processing treatment of post war issues (p.311)
- Process of the Negotiation with the Russians (p.316)
- Expectation of the Foreign Ministry (p.319)
- Trace of 33 years of Japan Association of Forced Internees (p.321)
- Postscript (p.327)
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Chapter 1
- Recollections
- Interviews
- Maizuru Museum
- Related Documents
- Women in Siberia
- Music
- Bibliography
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