An official website of the United States government
Here's how you know
Official websites use .mil
A
.mil
website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
Secure .mil websites use HTTPS
A
lock (
lock
)
or
https://
means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.
Skip to main content (Press Enter).
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
Leadership
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
Area of Responsibility map
Organization Chart
Components
Previous Commanders
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
Indo-Pacific Health Security Alliance - IPhsa
Women, Peace and Security
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
About USINDOPACOM
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
Media
RESOURCES
Newcomers
Wellness Resources
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Quality of Life
Careers
Useful Links
Resources
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
Industry Engagements
Contact
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia - News
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia YAP Infrastructure
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF-Micronesia
JTF - RED HILL
Search
Home
Media
NEWS
Home
Media
NEWS
HOME
LEADERSHIP
Commander
Deputy Commander
Chief of Staff
Senior Enlisted Leader
ABOUT USINDOPACOM
History
Area of Responsibility map
Organization Chart
Components
Previous Commanders
Counter-Lawfare: Tactical Aids & Legal Vigilance Products
Indo-Pacific Health Security Alliance - IPhsa
Women, Peace and Security
Freedom of Information Act
FOIA - Reading Room
Submit FOIA Request
Request Status
FOIA FAQS
MEDIA
NEWS
Press Releases and Readouts
Photos
Speeches / Testimony
RESOURCES
Newcomers
Wellness Resources
Travel Requirements
Useful Theater Information
ATFP FAQs
Quality of Life
Careers
Useful Links
CONTACT
Directory
Media Inquiries
Industry Engagements
JTF-MICRONESIA
JTF-Micronesia - News
JTF-Micronesia Leadership
JTF-Micronesia YAP Infrastructure
JTF-Micronesia Contact
JTF - RED HILL
31st MEU | 1st LAR conducts a Live Fire Range
F-35 Refueling Operations over the Pacific
31st MEU | Parachute Operations
Bushido Guardian 25: Trilateral exercise kicks off in the Pacific
U.S. Marines with 3rd Marine Logistics Group conduct aerial deliveries during Resolute Dragon 2
RD25 | 12th LCT’s Akuma Co Participates in a Force-on-Force Day 1
Orient Shield 25: Tactical Maneuver Training
U.S. Marines, Sailors, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force members refuel AH-64 Apaches with MV-22B Ospreys
U.S. Marines, Sailors, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force members refuel AH-64 Apaches with MV-22B Ospreys
Navy and Marine jets fly at MCAS Iwakuni
Freedom Edge 25
RD 25 | 12th LCT and 8th Division Execute a Bilateral Live-Fire Range
U.S. Marines, Japan Ground Self-Defense Force operate forward arming, refueling point
RD25 | 12th Littoral Combat Team Mortar Range
U.S., Japan, Republic of Korea navies sail during Exercise Freedom Edge in U.S. 7th Fleet
Every Jump Matters: 31st RQS enhances rescue readiness at Yokota
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Joint Army AH-64E Apache Helicopter Exercise
U.S., Japan forces fly together during Resolute Dragon 25
VMM-262 arrives at JMSDF Kanoya Air Base
Team Andersen honors 9/11’s 24th anniversary, remembers the fallen
Marines with MWSS-172, HMH-462 fly in formation
USS America (LHA 6) Conducts Flight Operations
3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, 3rd Marine Division conducts Combat Rubber Reconnaissance Craft training with USS Ohio (SSGN 726)
MRF-D 25.3: VMM-363’s MV-22B Ospreys arrive to USS Miguel Keith
III MEF Support Battalion executes live-fire machine gun range
Super Garuda Shield 25: U.S., Dutch, Japanese forces conduct close quarter battle drills
Super Garuda Shield 25- Airborne Jump into Baturaja, Indonesia
HSC-14 conducts flight ops in Dutch Harbor during Northern Edge 2025
Garuda Shield holds it's annual exercise between the Indonesian National Armed Forces and U.S. Military
2ID and ROK Army Conduct Combined Wet Gap Crossing Training for UFS25
Aurora Borealis appears over Abraham Lincoln during exercise Northern Edge 2025
Super Garuda Shield 25 Stinger live-fire exercise
Boxer Flight Operations
George Washington Conducts Flight Operations
Abraham Lincoln participates in exercise Northern Edge 2025
Boxer Conducts Flight Operations
Ulchi Freedom Shield 25: 2CAB Refueling Operations
Wolf Pack integrates with follow-on forces for UFS25
Abraham Lincoln conducts flight operations
Artillerymen Fight Mother Nature to Qualify at Rodriguez Live Fire Complex
Abraham Lincoln conducts routine operations
USS Theodore Roosevelt Flight Operations
2/23 Marines conduct final field operation during KMEP 25.2
31st MEU Supports Anti-Submarine Warfare Operation in Indo-Pacific
Brutal Company 4-9IN Conducts Blank-Fire React-to-Contact and Squad Attack Training
USS Theodore Roosevelt Flight Operations
Abraham Lincoln conducts flight operations
MRF-D 25.3: U.S. Marines and Airmen deliver critical supplies during foreign disaster relief in the Philippines
U.S. Marines Conduct a M240B Machine Gun Live-Fire Range
USS America, 31st MEU commemorate 250 years with formation in Coral Sea
12th LCT Executes an Expeditionary Advanced Base Operations FTX
III Marine Expeditionary Force Headquarters Company conducts 10k hike
2/23 Marines and ROK Marines Joint Obstacle Course Training at KMEP 25.2
Training for proficiency: C-17 crew practices cargo drops during TS25
NSW Conducts Multi-National VBSS Training during Talisman Sabre 2
USS Theodore Roosevelt Conducts Flight Operations
MDTF Projects Combined Joint Combat Power to Indian Ocean Territories During HIRAIN Demonstration
USS Milius (DDG 69) Conducts Live-Fire Weapons Shoot with Mark 45 5-Inch Light-Weight Gun and Close-In Weapon System
KC-46 integrates with RAAF for bilateral refueling during Talisman Sabre 25
Shore to Sea: Landing craft delivers cargo to Somerset
USINDOPACOM Stories
Band Soldier Uses Bilingual Skills, Music to Strengthen Bonds with Japanese Community
12 June 2014
From Noriko Kudo
"Thank you for saving me that day."
Sgt. Cameron Blackhurst, assigned to the U.S. Army Japan Band, here, was told those words by a tearful Japanese woman after he, along with other band members, put on a concert at Showa Kinen Park on the outskirts of Tokyo in November 2013.
Blackhurst, who plays the trumpet, discovered the meaning of the woman's words when she told him that the USARJ Band had performed at the shelter where she was living after having lost everything in the magnitude 9.0 earthquake that struck Japan, in March 2011.
Blackhurst said that it was a complete coincidence that the Japanese woman happened to be walking by the park that was roughly 250 miles away from the shelter and where she had chosen to start her new life more than two years later.
"'You have no idea of the impact your band had on me at the time of the disaster,'" recalled Blackhurst, commenting on the words of the Japanese woman.
"She said she was so grateful that to see our band perform again," Blackhurst said.
Blackhurst said he is often not aware of the impact the performances he and the USARJ Band put on can have on people.
Whether they are having a bad day or are going through struggles in their lives that he and the other band members can't comprehend, Blackhurst said, "Some inspirational music can sometimes lift (people) up, and give them some encouragement, or even just allow them to have some fun for a few minutes."
The mission of the USARJ band is to provide musical support to the Camp Zama community, but that is really only a portion of what they do, said Blackhurst. (The USARJ Band) also perform for the host communities throughout Japan and act as "the face of the U.S. Army in Japan," Blackhurst said.
The band is often invited to perform at various events and festivals, and even participate in joint concerts with the Japan Self-Defense Forces, explained Blackhurst.
Blackhurst said he has a unique responsibility and role within the band because he is fluent in Japanese. Blackhurst sings in Japanese, acts as master of ceremonies for the band's concerts, and converses with the Japanese audience members, before and after the band's performances. Blackhurst is also able to interpret Japanese to English for his fellow band members when the Japanese audience members express gratitude.
Blackhurst was first introduced to the Japanese language during a missionary trip to Japan, in February 2003. After a few months he said he reached a point where he thought, "I don't understand anything that is going on around me. All I'm going to do now is just listen and write down everything I hear."
"I started to pay close attention to not only what the Japanese people were saying, but how they would say it," said Blackhurst.
Blackhurst said he would ask any Japanese person who would listen to him what they were saying.
"Over time I was able to understand not just words, but also the hidden meaning behind words and phrases," he said.
The more he learned the language, Blackhurst said, the better equipped he was to understand the unique emotions and thought processes of the Japanese people.
"Even simple things like why everyone in Japan carries handkerchiefs," Blackhurst said.
"Those (nuances) are all hidden inside the language, but the only way to access that part of the language is through (the) people," said Blackhurst.
"When you get to know (Japanese) people to the point where they invite you to their house, you start to realize why Japanese (people) think the way they do, and why and how the culture bends and twists to meet the needs of Japanese people."
Blackhurst said he feels that when Americans can find a way to integrate those cultural and lingual differences with their own unique emotions and thought processes, the two sides can reach a platform where they can communicate on a level that goes further and deeper than either of the two cultures.
"Once I started making those connections with Japanese people, I fell completely and madly in love with the Japanese culture."
Blackhurst said from that core love of getting to know Japanese people, "everything else about Japan kind of came to (him) in layers."
Blackhurst said the biggest change came after he reached a point where he could have conversations with Japanese people without using English.
"It got me out of an "American mindset" and away from an American way of thinking," he explained.
"Speaking the language dropped me into another culture and it forced me to have to deal with the way another culture thinks, the way another culture feels about certain things. It made me realize that there is not just one way (to live)," said Blackhurst. "Any country that you go to in the world, any culture that you go to in the world, they are going to have their own way of dealing with things -- and that is okay."
Blackhurst said the best way to begin integrating oneself into another culture, Japanese or otherwise, is to make a native friend who can speak English and ask them questions.
"Not somebody necessarily that you can rely on to help you order at lunch or dinner, but somebody who is truly a friend," Blackhurst said.
"Come up with a list of things you want to be able to say. Learn how to say them (in the native language), and have your friends help you say them correctly," Blackhurst said. "Ask them questions, annoy them and bother them, and go out and use the language. Don't be afraid to be embarrassed."
Blackhurst related the process of learning a new language and culture to that of being a musician, dancer or actor.
"Performers in those mediums have to accept, to a certain degree, that they are going to make mistakes. It is how they deal with those mistakes that ultimately determine their success."
Blackhurst said music and the Japanese language are such engaging passions for him, that they inspired his pursuit in a long-term project.
"Japan has a very high suicide rate, especially among teenagers," said Blackhurst. "I have always thought that it would be interesting to use my music to encourage teenagers to find other solutions in their lives that can maybe help them deal with those challenging circumstances in their lives."
News Archive
2025 (662)
2024 (956)
2023 (806)
2022 (1167)
2021 (1044)
2020 (1072)
2019 (1152)
2018 (1102)
2017 (1338)
2016 (1447)
2015 (1383)
2014 (892)
2013 (32)
2012 (4)
Guidance-Card-Icon
Dept-Exclusive-Card-Icon