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They expected torture. Instead, they were handed hamburgers and Coca-Cola. In 1944, captured Japanese soldiers—trained to die before surrender—found themselves in U.S. POW camps where compassion, not cruelty, awaited them. Behind barbed wire in Texas, Idaho, and Kansas, more than 50,000 Japanese prisoners experienced the full force of America’s industrial abundance—baseball games, music, and the taste of freedom itself. Declassified U.S. Army reports and Red Cross accounts reveal a shocking transformation: battle-hardened men wept at the realization of the enemy’s humanity. This film uncovers the paradox of war—how kindness broke what bullets could not. References: • Records from the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) • Red Cross prisoner-of-war documentation • Oral history collections from the University of Texas • Resources from the Texas State Historical Association • Photographs and materials from the U.S. Army Signal Corps archives Disclaimer: This film is a historical documentary created solely for educational and informational purposes. All depictions and narratives are drawn from verified events and accounts of World War II. The content does not endorse or support any political viewpoint, ideology, or act of violence. Its purpose is to explore the human experience, the paradoxes of war, and the enduring lessons of history.