The fighting ended at Itoman, where Gushiken and other volunteer cave diggers — or “gamahuya” in their native Okinawan language — have found the remains of what are likely hundreds of people.
The fighting ended at Itoman, where Gushiken and other volunteer cave diggers — or "gamahuya" in their native Okinawan language — have found the remains of what are likely hundreds of people.
The fighting ended at Itoman, where Gushiken and other volunteer cave diggers — or “gamahuya” in their native Okinawan language — have found the remains of what are likely hundreds of people.
An estimated 240,000 people were killed or went missing in the Battle of Okinawa during World War II. Eighty years later, the ...