Japanese American Kenje Ogata Fighting during War World II.
After high school graduation, Kenje Ogata
born 01 June 1919 in Gary, Indiana, worked in the plating room at National Manufacturing. He learned to fly airplanes through the civilian pilot training program. The day after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Kenje boarded a train to Chicago to enlist in the United States Army Air Corps. Because of his Japanese heritage, Kenje was strongly urged to “just return home.” The determined Kenje replied, “I’m here to serve.”
Kenje became an Army medical corpsman assigned to hospital service at Rockford’s Camp Grant. Kenje then waged a letter writing campaign, asking for letters of recommendation from the Sterling mayor, police chief, city attorney, and district judges. Two years later he became one of two Japanese-Americans allowed to fly for the United States in World War II.

Dr. Ogata was assigned to a B-24 bomber as a turret-ball gunner with the 15th Air Force
near Foggia, Italy. He flew fifty-five missions, survived two crashes, bailing out over Poland and enemy territory in Hungary. He was awarded numerous medals, including the Purple Heart
and the Air Medal
with three bronze oak leaf clusters.
The Fifteenth dropped 303,842 tons of bombs on enemy targets in nine countries of Europe, including military installations in eight capital cities. Its combat personnel made 148,955 heavy bomber sorties and 87,732 fighter sorties against the enemy. It lost 3,364 aircraft and 21,671 personnel killed, wounded, missing and taken prisoner — 20,430 bomber crewmen and 1,187 fighter pilots.
After the war, Kenje enrolled in classes with the University of Illinois medical extension program. He completed his dental training at the University of Illinois at Chicago in 1953 and practiced dentistry one year at a dental clinic for children in Hawaii. Dr. Ogata opened his own dental practice in Sterling where his wife Wilma worked with him. Twice he traveled to Guatemala to volunteer his dental services. After forty-two years of teamwork, Kenje and Wilma retired in 1997.
Kenje Ogata died 18 January 2012 (aged 92) in Sterling Illinois and is buried in the Riverside Cemetery .





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