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| Tirones | Post; Japanese P.O.WMy grand fathere and his brother were both in the changi P.O.W camp. They were conscripted in the field ambulance. Back to the point of this post I was wondereing if any one eles has storys from the changi camp or the thai/burma railway e.t.c. ta |
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| Tribunus Laticlavius | We had a quite of number of men that were Japanese POW's working for my old Company, most of these men had to retire early due to failing health. Those years of torture, starvation, neglect and tropical disease took a heavy toll on them in later years and I don't think I knew of one of them that worked to his retirement age.
__________________ LeEnfield Rides again |
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| Primus Pilus | I heard the tests they did was very scary too... tons of people were cut open live and such to see reaction and such.... UGH so sick..... its worse than being shot and dying peacefully... imagine surviving after getting chemicals stuck up you while ur opened up or something.... ugh.. scary thoughts... ugh if I was a japanese tester/surgeon.. i would not do the job.. because they are people too.. ugh...
__________________ May 15, 2009 = Second Lostenant! Commissioning in Dress Blues!! |
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| Milforum's Bouncer | Jules, you have to realise the rampant racism at play during WWII. These prisoners were seen as sub-human so for them it was no different than dissecting frogs in high school biology class. It is one of the dynamics of war on individuals. Many come to view their enemy as less than human in order to ease the psychological pain of taking a life. The fact you don't understand this fully is a blessing.
__________________ "The purpose of fighting is to win. There is no possible victory in defense. The sword is more important than the shield and skill is more important than either. The final weapon is the brain. All else is supplemental." - John Steinbeck |
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| Forum Digger | Quote:
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__________________ Platoon Commander, 4 Platoon, B Company 10/27th Battalion RSAR - RAinf ![]() PRO PATRIA | ||
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| Master Gunner | My mother's only brother was a POW of the Japanese. He was a doctor who arrived in the Phillipines just in time to be captured in its fall. He was on the Bataan Death March and was held for a time in China and then sent to work in condemned coal mines in Japan as slave labor. These mines had long been unsafe to be in and each day the ceiling sagged lower and lower until they had to crawl in to mine the coal. Of course many men died. My uncle was often beaten for his efforts to treat his fellow prisoners. The company that owned that mine and who to this day does not acknowledge their crimes let alone talk about any kind of compensation is Mitsui. |
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| Centurion | A Great Uncle of mine was in the 8th Division, and was taken prisoner at Singapore. He was in Changi, but he lost quite a few of his mates, we don't know where, because he never talked about it. He returned to Australia in late '46 after going through Rehabilitation, but he was still pretty thin, had horrendus scarring, and frequent nightmares until he died. He never talked about the war at all. Never put his medals on display, never marched on ANZAC Day. The only enlightenment of what he went through was one night, my Aunty was going to thrw some leftover food in the bin, and He went off at her. He yelled at her about wasting food, how lucky she was, and made everyone finish up all the leftovers. Other than that, he was perfectly normal and quite religious.
__________________ "Even if I wished to surrender to you - and I don't - I am commanding Australian's who would cut my throat if I accepted your Terms" Colonel C Hore, Siege of Elands River, 1900 If You want to See the Future, Read a History Book |
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