
Naomi Benyas was a reporter with the Honolulu Advertiser. She mostly did music and theatre reviews, and sometimes was assigned to interview celebrities on "Boat Days," among them was Clare Booth Luce, Bette Davis and Ernest Hemingway.
According to Chaplin (PRESSTIME IN HAWAII), Benyas was good reporter. She was the daughter of a prominent Honolulu physician and an accomplished pianist. OK, since the election of Barack Obama, I have to mention that she, too, is a Punahou graduate. (Benyas went on to University of California, Berkeley).
I've included her here because two days after the attack, Benyas wrote the following column which was published on December 10, 1941. All during the war she wrote patriotic pieces from a woman's perspective.
THIS REALM OF OURS by Naomi Benyas
So we’re at war, we’re seeing death and bloodshed and evacuations and tears of those who are suffering and the tears of those who are left behind. We’re having food rationed and we’re walking instead of riding. Movies are out and parties, and night time brings complete darkness. We’re glued to the radios, memorizing the papers, but cheerfully reassuring one another.We’re pshawing wild rumors and housing evacuees and giving blood and helping in first aid work. We’re keeping business going “as usual” obeying the safety rules outlined, smiling instead of complaining.
We’re closer than ever to our neighbors, to the man on the street, keeping away from the telephone and discussions with Mary or Jack or Mrs. Jones, staying off the street, indulging in no panic. We’re waving encouragement to our planes even though they can’t see us, waving to the boys in uniform who are protecting us, volunteering for every type of service and helping in every way we can.

We’re civilian officers, soothing nervous feelings or keeping order, Red Cross assistants rolling bandages, ROTC boys standing guard, truck drivers toting supplies, defense workers keeping the projects going.
We’re navy and army wives with our chins and spirits up, we’re doctors and nurses giving of time and energy on a 24-hour service, we’re sleeping on floors of our business in “emergency” business, we’re remaining calm and cooperating with the military regulations.
We’re evacuees without a whimper or finding room for the evacuees, we’re staring at damage and confident that it’ll be avenged, we’re taking no chance for our safety and that of others.

We’re going on with our Christmas shopping worrying more about who has a cigarette than about a bomb, keeping up with the continued story, singing in the shower. If we’re women, we’re wishing we were men so we could be of still more service, but man or woman, we’re doing everything in our power to help the United States win the war and to help keep those spirits up, we’re ready, willing and able. We’re Americans.
Honolulu Advertiser, December 10, 1941.

PHOTOS: All photos from Hawaii War Records Depository.
1 comments:
I have read your bolg and noted in the section relating to "Patton's list for initial seizure of Orange Nationals," that one of the names listed was my grandfather Napoleon Nakamura. When I do a Google search why is your blog the only site that pops up relating to this?
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