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Italian writer recalls ‘hell’ in WWII camp in Japan where father cut off finger (Pt. 1)

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Dacia Maraini, center, is pictured as a girl after World War II, in this photo provided by the Hokkaido University Archives.


Deprived of food and unable to bear the intense hunger, detainees at a foreign internment camp in Nagoya during the closing days of the Pacific War picked up ants on the road and ate them. When they complained about their poor treatment, Japan’s Special Higher Police repeatedly threatened to slit their throats.


The “hell” of that camp left deep scars on a young Italian girl interned there. That girl was Dacia Maraini, who went on to become a renowned writer. She has published novels and plays on feminist and anti-fascist themes, and she has even been considered for the Nobel Prize in literature. Now 87, she says the seven years she spent in Japan from the age of 2 became part of her identity.


When the famed writer came to Japan in June this year, she recalled her childhood experiences in the country including her internment and evacuation, and her interactions with a young Japanese man later caught up in false accusations during the war. This is the first of a series of articles in which she imparts a message for today’s generation.






Writer Dacia Maraini, who came to Japan again in June 2024, speaks at Hokkaido University in Sapporo’s Kita Ward on June 17. (Mainichi/Hiroyuki Katano)


Japanophile father begins study abroad in Hokkaido


Dacia was born in 1936 as the first daughter of Italian national Fosco Maraini. Fosco, who was deeply interested in Japanese culture, studied anthropology at the University of Florence and later received a grant from an organization affiliated with the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs to study at Hokkaido Imperial University (now Hokkaido University) in 1938. There, he researched Ainu beliefs and rituals. Dacia was just 2 years old at the time.


In 1941, Fosco was appointed to teach Italian at Kyoto Imperial University (now Kyoto University), and the family accordingly moved from Sapporo to Kyoto. However, the Pacific War that broke out in December that year cast a dark shadow over the Marainis. When Italy unconditionally surrendered to the Allies in 1943, their lives drastically changed.






Dacia Maraini’s father Fosco is pictured in this file photo provided by Kosaiji temple. He was active as a writer after World War II, serving as a bridge between Japan and Italy.


Up until then, Italy had been allied with Germany and Japan under the Tripartite Pact. However, when Germany invaded northern Italy and established a new fascist government, the family’s home country was divided. Japan supported the new fascist government, but the Maraini family, who were anti-fascist, refused to pledge their loyalty. They were subsequently branded “enemy aliens,” and in the autumn of 1943, they were taken to an internment camp for foreigners in Nagoya.


Cutting off a little finger in protest


In the Omoteyama district of Nagoya’s Tempaku Ward stands a hill from which a quiet residential neighborhood overlooks the city. A large company dormitory now occupies the site that was once the internment camp where the Marainis were held.


A total of 16 Italians including the Maraini family were detained at the camp, and they were strictly monitored by the Special Higher Police. What caused them the most suffering in this life without freedom was hunger. The Special Higher Police were siphoning off the inmates’ food. Faced with this extreme situation, Fosco and the others went on a hunger strike, but the situation did not improve. In a desperate protest, Fosco used an ax to chop off the little finger on his left hand and threw it at a Special Higher Police officer.






The former Hokkaido Imperial University (present-day Hokkaido University), where Fosco Maraini researched the Ainu people, is seen in this file photo.


Dacia was 7 at the time. The hunger, the verbal abuse from the police forces, and her father’s desperate actions were etched into her memory. Looking back on those times, she says, “I wasn’t crying or despairing, but rather, I was defying adversity and standing against the difficulties with courage. I learned from my parents that not losing hope gives us the strength to live.”


(Japanese original by Kohei Shinkai, Nagoya News Department)



Italian writer recalls ‘hell’ in WWII camp in Japan where father cut off finger (Pt. 1)

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