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- Takashi_Nagase abstract "Takashi Nagase (永瀬 隆, Nagase Takashi, c.1919 - June 21, 2011) was an interpreter of the Ministry of War of Japan. He was born in 1918 in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan. He learned English language from an U.S. Methodist in a college in Tokyo. He was one of the officers in charge of the construction of the "Death Railway" which ran between Thailand and Burma and included the famous bridge over the River Kwai, and is known for the use of forced labor of Allied prisoners of war, though the majority of the labor (and resultant deaths) was incurred by romusha, or local civilians pressed into labor.Nagase is also noted for his reconciliation with former British Army officer Eric Lomax, whom he interrogated and tortured at a Japanese prisoner-of-war camp in 1942. Lomax then went on to mention his reconciliation with Nagase in his autobiography, The Railway Man. The book chronicled his experience before, during, and after World War II. It won the 1996 NCR Book Award and the J. R. Ackerley Prize for Autobiography.Nagase also wrote a book on his own experiences during and after the war entitled Crosses and Tigers, and financed a Buddhist temple at the bridge to atone for his actions during the war. The meeting between the two men was filmed as a documentary Enemy, My Friend? (1995), directed by Mike Finlason.After the end of World War II, Takashi Nagase became a devout Buddhist priest and tried to atone for the Japanese army's treatment of prisoners of war. Takashi has made more than 100 missions of atonement to the River Kwai in Thailand.He died in 2011.".
- Takashi_Nagase birthDate "1919".
- Takashi_Nagase birthYear "1919".
- Takashi_Nagase deathDate "2011-06-21".
- Takashi_Nagase deathYear "2011".
- Takashi_Nagase wikiPageExternalLink article_view.asp?at_code=282034.
- Takashi_Nagase wikiPageExternalLink 09131.html.
- Takashi_Nagase wikiPageExternalLink ErnestGordon.htm.
- Takashi_Nagase wikiPageID "35827695".
- Takashi_Nagase wikiPageRevisionID "606652258".
- Takashi_Nagase dateOfBirth "c.1919".
- Takashi_Nagase dateOfDeath "2011-06-21".
- Takashi_Nagase hasPhotoCollection Takashi_Nagase.
- Takashi_Nagase name "Nagase, Takashi".
- Takashi_Nagase shortDescription "Japanese Army officer".
- Takashi_Nagase description "Japanese Army officer".
- Takashi_Nagase description "Japanese Army officer".
- Takashi_Nagase subject Category:1919_births.
- Takashi_Nagase subject Category:2011_deaths.
- Takashi_Nagase subject Category:Japanese_Army_officers.
- Takashi_Nagase subject Category:Japanese_Buddhists.
- Takashi_Nagase subject Category:Japanese_military_personnel_of_World_War_II.
- Takashi_Nagase subject Category:People_from_Kurashiki.
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- Takashi_Nagase type Person.
- Takashi_Nagase type Person.
- Takashi_Nagase type Q215627.
- Takashi_Nagase type Q5.
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- Takashi_Nagase type Person.
- Takashi_Nagase comment "Takashi Nagase (永瀬 隆, Nagase Takashi, c.1919 - June 21, 2011) was an interpreter of the Ministry of War of Japan. He was born in 1918 in Kurashiki, Okayama, Japan. He learned English language from an U.S. Methodist in a college in Tokyo.".
- Takashi_Nagase label "Takashi Nagase".
- Takashi_Nagase label "永瀬隆".
- Takashi_Nagase sameAs 永瀬隆.
- Takashi_Nagase sameAs m.0jwyl0_.
- Takashi_Nagase sameAs Q7677353.
- Takashi_Nagase sameAs Q7677353.
- Takashi_Nagase wasDerivedFrom Takashi_Nagase?oldid=606652258.
- Takashi_Nagase givenName "Takashi".
- Takashi_Nagase isPrimaryTopicOf Takashi_Nagase.
- Takashi_Nagase name "Nagase, Takashi".
- Takashi_Nagase name "Takashi Nagase".
- Takashi_Nagase surname "Nagase".