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Veterans' tales recall Pearl Harbor 71 years later

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Ivan Prall, 90, reminisces Thursday in his Malta home about his time as an Army photographer during World War II as he displays a few of the items he’s held onto over the years including his camera, his carbine rifle and a flag that was carried by a Japanese soldier. (Kyle Bursaw – kbursaw@shawmedia.com)

Ivan Prall was working on his homework when he heard the radio report about a Japanese attack on the U.S. naval base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.

“I didn’t rush off to enlist. I wasn’t old enough at the time to be drafted,” said Prall, 90, of Malta. “I bought a ’33 Plymouth for $90 that summer. That’s what I drove up to Rockford to enlist. I left it with my folks when I went off to war.”

Today is the 71st anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, the attack that paved the way for Prall’s drive to enlist in Rockford.

It’s the date President Franklin D. Roosevelt said “will live in infamy.” An hour after Roosevelt’s speech, Congress declared war on Japan. Three days later, Germany and Italy – Japan’s allies in World War II – declared war on the United States, which reciprocated the declarations that day.

Some say that Dec. 7, 1941, was the day that yanked a nation out of a depression and foisted greatness upon a generation of soldiers and Rosie the Riveters. Decades later, as the leaders of the free world discuss a “fiscal cliff” and a Palestinian state, one Northern Illinois University assistant professor sees fewer and fewer students recording the oral histories of World War II veterans.

Stanley Arnold, an NIU assistant professor who specializes in 20th century American history, compared the historical impact of the bombing of Pearl Harbor to the Sept. 11 attacks and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963.

“When you have a tragedy such as this, there’s a great sense of, on the one hand, shock, and then a kind of resolve, reconstruction, a rebuilding [in many ways],” Arnold said. “Out of this comes a greater sense of unity. The question is how long this unity lasts.”

Stories such as Miller’s and Prall’s are increasingly living in history books and recordings.

For years, Arnold has had students record oral histories of friends or family members of significant events that occurred before 1992. Over time, Arnold said he has received fewer recollections of the World War II era.

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