Love Story Of Former Japanese Prisoners And Russian Women

After 40 years of living with the Russian wife, he received the belief that his first wife was still alive and has waited for him for 51 years in Japan. Klavdia Novikova and Mr. Yasaburo Hachiya Young Young .ba Klavdia Novikova (Siberia) Mr. Yasaburo Hachiya (Japanese) in the resettlement area for prisoners of Gulag re-education camp

.When, both have just been released from stalin execution sentences. However, due to confusion, Mr. Yasaburo Hachiya was not brought back to his hometown
He had to take a Russian name to hide his origins, continuing to live in this country. Meetings were married and together to live together 37 years before Mrs. Klavdia Novikova decided to divorce to him to return to him The first wife in Japan - who he thought was died for a long time. Klavida Novikova died, her departure was hardly noticed in Russia, but for Japanese people, this is a progress It is important. This Russian woman is viewed by Japanese as the last symbol of the woman's love and sacrifice. She sacrificed her happiness to ask her husband to return to the first wife who was waiting for him 51 years. And only when I returned to Japan, he regained the "dignity" he deserved to have, instead of living as a former prisoner in Russia. "His wife needs to hug him once before before Both died. I felt my heart like tearing it sometimes let him leave. But that's not anyone's fault
Just due to fate. It is important that he will live better in Japan. He had to go through a lot of things, and may not survive here, "said Ms. Klavdia Novikova before his death. The arrangement of Yasaburo's fate and the first wife to begin to start before World War II , When Mr. Yasaburo, the son of a wealthy family, along with the Japanese wife Hisako moved to Korea to settle, to find a better life. In Korea, two people have together 2 children, one boy, a girl. When the Red Soviet Red Army advanced in 1945, many Japanese were arrested and charged with spies. Mr. Yasaburo was taken to a notorious reform camp of Stalin in Eastern Siberia with a 10-year sentence. Klavdia was married and had a son. She was also detained for a decade in this area after the conviction. This resilient woman said: "I have experienced hell scene, but I don't collapse, don't even say a obscene. This camp has spoiled many women. It's scary to remember those things. The most important thing for me is to keep your soul ". After being out of the camp, she discovered that the husband abandoned her and had a new family. At the same time, Japanese prisoners were released from the camp and the officer who had forgotten the name of Mr. Yasaburo on the list of prisoners returned to the country. At this time, Mr. Yasaburo thought that his wife and children died. He was also afraid to think about how he would receive after many years in the Soviet Union. Therefore, he decided to become a Soviet citizen under the name Yakov (Yasha) Ivanovich. "We met in Bryansk area, in a resettlement camp. I saw Yasha with a non-Russian face. He is skinny, suppressed and his eyes are pain. That image made my heart hurt. "However, they did not start right away the relationship because she was afraid of affection to a person who was imprisoned for a spy against the Soviet Union, although it was a judgment oan. For it until the early 1960s, when she moved to the progress village in the Far East of Russia, he wrote to her a letter opening with her. But she refused because she was afraid. "I just told a close friend that I was exchanging a letter from a former prisoner". Four out, Mr. Yasaburo surpassed the 6 Russian time zones to get to her. She was heartless, then they got married, starting a happy and loved life. He became a barber, as a photographer, while practicing acupuncture. They grow tomatoes, cucumbers, raise a goat and a bee. They live simple but happy, although there are no common children. Klavdia and Mr. Yasha live happily together for many years. "There are no men like Yasha. The sisters in the village are jealous of me because he doesn't drink alcohol, not smoking, "she said. Two loves and sticking so much that they appointed to die together because they couldn't be far apart. Mr. Yasaburo even bought two coffins ready in the attic. After the Soviet Union collapsed, a local people told his Japanese business partner to the Japanese man who lived for a long time here . This story helped the clue of Yasaburo's younger brother, then discovered his wife and daughter still alive. They survived the Korean War and returned to Japan, while his son died in South Korea. Hey, he knew that the first wife still felliginally waited for him to wait for him to 51 years. Returning home, she worked as a nurse, saving money to build a house where she said was to spend his missing husband. His lives began to turn upside down when his daughter, then has 51

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