He spent six years in British prisons and internment camps but still admired the Queen at the end of his life. Takayuki Eguchi had been detained for six years until 1946 in prisons and internment camps without knowing the reason of lengthy...See moreHe spent six years in British prisons and internment camps but still admired the Queen at the end of his life. Takayuki Eguchi had been detained for six years until 1946 in prisons and internment camps without knowing the reason of lengthy detention, and was never allowed back to Britain to see his wife and children. His daughter, Edna Eguchi Read of Milton Keynes, England, decided to write to him then living in Japan after a 22-year silence but it was less than five years before Takayuki passed away. He sent her his internment diaries he kept on Bronco toilet papers with a fountain pen. Then Edna spent years to research to find out what happened to her Japanese father. Written by
Anonymous
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