On February 19 1945 Thomas McPhatter found himself on a landing craft heading toward the beach on Iwo Jima.
”There were bodies bobbing up all around, all these dead men,” said the former United States marine, now 83 and living in San Diego. ”Then we were crawling on our bellies and moving up the beach.
”I jumped in a foxhole and there was a young white marine holding his family pictures. He had been hit by shrapnel, he was bleeding from the ears, nose and mouth. It frightened me. The only thing I could do was lie there and repeat the Lord’s Prayer, over and over and over.”
Sadly, Sergeant McPhatter’s experience is not mirrored in Flags of Our Fathers, Clint Eastwood’s big-budget, Oscar-tipped film of the battle for the Japanese island that opened on Friday in the US. While the film’s battle scenes show scores of young soldiers in combat, none of them are African-American. Yet almost 900 African-American troops took part in the battle of Iwo Jima, including McPhatter.
The film tells the story of the raising of the stars and stripes over Mount Suribachi at the tip of the island. The moment was captured in a photograph that became a symbol of the US war effort. Eastwood’s film follows the marines in the picture, including the Native American Ira Hayes, as they were removed from combat operations to promote the sale of government war bonds.
McPhatter, who went on to serve in Vietnam and rose to the rank of lieutenant commander in the US Navy, even had a part in the raising of the flag. ”The man who put the first flag up on Iwo Jima got a piece of pipe from me to put the flag up on,” he says. That, too, is absent from the film.
”Of all the movies that have been made of Iwo Jima, you never see a black face,” said McPhatter. ”This is the last straw. I feel like I’ve been denied, I’ve been insulted, I’ve been mistreated. But what can you do? We still have a strong underlying force in my country of rabid racism.”
Melton McLaurin, author of the forthcoming The Marines of Montford Point and an accompanying documentary to be released in February, says that there were hundreds of black soldiers on Iwo Jima from the first day of the 35-day battle. Although most of the black marine units were assigned ammunition and supply roles, the chaos of the landing soon undermined the battle plan.
”When they first hit the beach the resistance was so fierce that they weren’t shifting ammunition, they were firing their rifles,” said McLaurin.
The failure to transfer the active role played by African-Americans at Iwo Jima to the big screen does not surprise him.
”One of the marines I interviewed said that the people who were filming newsreel footage on Iwo Jima deliberately turned their cameras away when black folks came by. Blacks are not surprised at all when they see movies set where black troops were engaged and never show on the screen.
”I would like to say that it was from ignorance but anybody can do research and come up with books about African-Americans in World War II. I think it has to do with box office and what producers of movies think Americans really want to see.”
He added: ”I want to see these guys get their due. They’re just so anxious to have their story told and to have it known.”
Roland Durden, another black marine, landed on the beach on the third day. ”When we hit the shore we were loaded with ammunition and the Japanese hit us with mortar.” Private Durden was soon assigned to burial detail, ”burying the dead day in, day out. It seemed like endless days. They treated us like workmen rather than marines.”
Durden, too, is wearied but unsurprised at the omissions in Eastwood’s film. ”We’re always left out of the films, from John Wayne on,” he said. Durden ascribes to both the conspiracy as well as the cock-up theory of history. ”They didn’t want blacks to be heroes. This was pre-1945, pre-civil rights.”
A spokesperson for Warner Brothers said: ”The film is correct based on the book.” The omission was first remarked upon in a review by Fox News columnist Roger Friedman, who noted that the history of black involvement at Iwo Jima was recorded in several books, including Christopher Moore’s recent Fighting for America: Black Soldiers — the Unsung Heroes of World War II.
”They weren’t in the background at all,” said Moore. ”The people carrying the ammunition were 90% black, so that’s an opportunity to show black soldiers. These are our films and very often they become our history, historical documents.”
Yvonne Latty, a New York University professor and author of We Were There: Voices of African-American Veterans (2004), wrote to Eastwood and the film’s producers pleading with them to include the experience of black soldiers. HarperCollins, the book’s publishers, sent the director a copy, but never heard back.
”It would take only a couple of extras and everyone would be happy,” she said. ”No one’s asking for them to be the stars of the movies, but at least show that they were there. This is the way a new generation will think about Iwo Jima. Once again it will be that African-American people did not serve, that we were absent. It’s a lie.”
The first chapter of James Bradley’s book Flags of Our Fathers, which forms the basis of the movie, opens with a quotation from president Harry Truman. ”The only thing new in the world is the history you don’t know.” It would provide a fitting endnote to Eastwood’s film. — Guardian Unlimited Â