Letters from Chiran

In the southern Japanese region of Kyūshū during WW2, the young pilots of the military base of Chiran, would always have their meals at the nearby “Shokudo”.
This dining hall was owned by an old lady and she ran the Shokudo before and after the war.
This dining hall was owned by an old lady and she ran the Shokudo before and after the war.
In 1945 the pilots of the Japanese Special Attack Units, commonly known as “Kamikaze”, would share with her some of their stories and leave behind their last wishes and dreams, before beginning what was, for many of them, their last mission.
She tells us her story and the one of far too young “Kamikaze” pilots, in times where it seemed reasonable to somebody, to send the youngest generation of a nation to die in vain, in a completely senseless mission during an already lost war.
The question comes spontaneously: Is there any scenario where this sacrifice is acceptable?
Performance and Concept by Tomoya Kawamura
Directed by Francesco Procopio
Co-Written and Co-Created by Tomoya Kawamura & Francesco Procopio
Masks by Richard Dent & Francesco Procopio