Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day: ‘Sure, I was scared. But I was doing it for my country’
Francisco “Frank” Paredes of Atwater remembers the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor 81 years ago quite clearly — because he was there.
Paredes, 102, was a special guest Wednesday during a Remembrance Day ceremony at the Clovis Veterans Memorial District.
In an on-stage interview with Paul Loeffler, he recounted the intercom message from superior officers: “This is not a drill! This is not a drill! Man your stations!
“I didn’t have a station, so I manned the first machine gun I could find.”
Paredes said he soon realized the futility of that and drew his .45-caliber pistol to fire at the bomber planes making suicide runs.
“Sure, I was scared. But I was doing it for my country,” Paredes said.
With that, he rose from his walker and pulled back his jacket to show he was dressed in military fatigue proudly wearing his medals.
The ceremony to honor the 2,403 service members and civilians who were lost in the Dec. 7, 1941 attack also included presentation of colors by the Marine Corps League and a remembrance ceremony conducted by American Legion Post 147 and VFW Post 3225.
Similar events were held nationwide including at Tesoro Viejo in Madera County.