Tag Archives: 2023 Conference

Arlene Bennett: The Fall of Singapore and the Fate of the Last 65 Australian Nurses in 1942

The 8th Division Australian Army nurses of the 2/10 AGH, 2/13 AGH and 2/4th Casualty Clearing Station were stationed in Malaya. As the Japanese proceeded with great speed down the Malayan Peninsula the nurses were ordered to transfer to Singapore. They were working at St Patrick’s School and the ACS Oldham Hall School until they were to be evacuated.

On the 10th of February 6 members of the AANS were sent on the WAH SUI with wounded soldiers bound for Australia. It was decided that all the nurses should be evacuated from Singapore because of what had happened in Hong Kong. The nurses were asked for volunteers to leave on the first ship available. No one volunteered to leave so Matron Paschke and Matron Drummond decided who would leave Singapore first. Fifty-nine nurses were selected to leave first on the EMPIRE STAR and later on the 12th of February the SS VYNER BROOKE would be one of the last ships to leave Singapore. Those on the Empire Star were bombed but they made it back to Australia even though fourteen people on the ship were killed. The nurses flung themselves over the passengers to shield them from the bombing. The nurses received the George Cross for their bravery. The SS VYNER BROOKE had a very different story filled with tragedy.

For the 65 nurses on SS VYNER BROOKE there was still much work to be done on the way home. They helped with the food that was on board as most people didn’t think to carry food with them.

SS Vyner Brooke

 Sister Clarice Halligan had written home to her sister in Melbourne, “Thank you very much for the parcel. I was glad to get it. We are carefully packing all tinned foods in the bottom of our kit bags in case we are in for a siege which is quite likely, however we are ready what may come, we can make it and a bit more, as long as we keep the Japs out of Australia anything that may happenhere is worthwhile.” Clarice would be one of twenty-one nurses massacred on Banka Island.

The ship travelled during the night and kept close to the shoreline hoping not to be detected. This worked for a while but on the 14th of May their luck would run out. The ship was bombed and machine guns strafed those who were in the water or in lifeboats. The nurses assisted the passengers to abandon the ship prior to leaving the ship themselves with some emergency supplies of medicines and bandages in their pockets. Twelve nurses were lost either at the time of the bombing, in the water or floating off and away from land.

Up to 100 boats were lost in the bombing of the ships in the Banka Strait and up to 5000 people were lost.

A group of 22 Australian Nurses washed up on Radji Beach near Muntok in Indonesia. Matron Drummond suggested that a bonfire should be lit to act as a beacon for those who were still at sea. About 60 men also washed up on the beach. The nurses cared for those who were injured with what little they had. Eventually it was decided that a party of men should walk into the town and alert the Japanese that the women and injured had remained on the beach. Matron Drummond also suggested that the civilian women and children should begin the long walk into town. This single act saved so many lives. The women and children passed the Japanese who would ultimately go to Radji Beach.

When the Japanese soldiers arrived at Radji Beach they ordered the men around the bluff in two groups where they were shot and bayonetted to death. Once they had finished dealing with the men they returned to the women wiping their bloodied bayonets. What happened next was shocking. The nurses were allegedly raped and then they were lined up and urged to walk into the sea. A machine gun began to fire upon them. Matron Drummond said to her nurses, ‘Chin up girls….. I am proud of you….I love you all.” She was brutally shot as were all of the nurses. All but one of the nurses died. Vivian Bullwinkel who was taller than average was shot just above the hip but no vital organs were hit. She feigned death in the water and was gradually washed back to the shore. She could no see sign of life in any of the nurses who were washed up on the beach. The Japanese had left the beach. Vivian crept into the jungle behind the beach and hid. She slept for about 24 hours. A voice from within the jungle called to her. It was Private Kinsley, a British soldier who had been badly injured. Vivian, who had been shot, managed to look after him. She walked to a nearby village to ask for assistance but the men of the village offered none because they we afraid of reprisals from the Japanese. As she began to return to the jungle, the women called to her and they left her some food. She and Private Kinsley lived in the jungle for 12 days. Vivian decided that they should give themselves up. Private Kinsley begged for one day more of freedom. When asked why he told Vivian that it was his birthday and that he wanted to be free one last time. They waited.

Betty Jeffrey and Vivian Bullwinkel

The next day they set off into Muntok and were met by a passing car of a Japanese officer. They were treated kindly and were taken into camp.

Meanwhile 31 more of the Australian Nurses had come ashore all along Banka Island. They were initially held in the Customs House and moved a few doors up to the picture theatre. After a few days they were moved to the Coolie Lines and the men went to the Muntok Gaol next door. Betty Jeffrey and Iole Harper would take three days to reach land having swum into the mangrove swamps. Eventually all the nurses would be together. Thirty-two of the sixty-five had survived. Vivian retold her story but the nurses agreed to never speak of it again until they were at home. Private Kinsley died a few days after he was imprisoned.

Most of the nurses had discarded their shoes as they left the ship so they bound the feet in rags or found shoes and used them and some made trompers- wooden scuffs.

The nurses would soon be moved to Palembang in Sumatra. They would be taken in a dirty coal carrying ship out to sea and then up the Musi River to Palembang. The nurses would briefly be settled into a camp at Bukit Besar which was inhabited by various soldiers as well as civilian men and women.

The nurses were then sent to a camp which was referred to as Irenelaan. The men’s camp was the Palembang Gaol. Behind the women’s camp the men were building a new camp in which to be housed. The women’s houses were hopelessly cramped with little space within for the women housed there. The women had few items and two of the nurses had found a used toothbrush which they shared throughout the war. There was little firewood to burn to do the cooking. There were no medications to use as the women became ill. A used tin would become a valuable item for the women. Life was monotonous for them but they soon developed ways of improving their lot. Margaret Dryburgh , a missionary from England and Norah Chambers would start the vocal orchestra.There were lectures given to the women on a variety of subjects. The food was cooked by groups of women. The amount of food was limited. The rice was dirty, the vegetables were left by the Japanese in the sun to rot and there were small amounts of meat left for the women. The women had to clean the latrines with coconut shells or similar. During the rainy season this task was made even worse.

As Christmas Eve 1942 approached the women saw the men passing by to go to work. The woman began to sing Silent Night and Oh Come All Ye Faithful to them as they passed by. The following day the men would return this favour. It was the closest that they would get to be with each other.

The women lost condition as each day passed. During their time in Palembang they could go to the Charitas Hospital for some extra treatment. During these visits to the hospital some of the women could meet with the men from the men’s camp to discover how the men were doing. Sr Mavis Hannah was caught by the Japanese with messages in a sanitary pad to be relayed to wives in the women’s camp. She was left to stand in the sun for hours as punishment. The nuns from Charitas were also imprisoned by the Japanese becauses they appeared to be on the side of the prisoners. They hid medicines in their robes which would give some hope to those who were ill. They too joined the camp.

The women moved once again, this time to the men’s camp Palembang. The men had left the camp but before they left they had trashed much of the camp. They didn’t know that the women would be taken there. Some of the women would die in Palembang

Eventually the women’s camp was moved back to Muntok. They were taken by boat. The camp was very primitive. The women were deteriorating and so many died. Disease was rampant in Muntok. There was malaria, Dengue fever, Banka  Fever alongside malnutrition, beri-beri and dysentery. The nurses took care of the sick as well as doing their other tasks but gradually they were becoming sick too. Four nurses would die in the camp in Muntok during 1945. This was terrible for the nurses to endure but they needed to carry on as best they could. They had very little access to medication. The amounts that were left would have almost been useless.

By April 1945 the internees were to be moved again. This time they were taken in two groups back to Sumatra. Women were dying and so many did not make it to their final destination. They were taken on a ship to Palmembang. Conditions were appalling. They arrived late at night and were loaded into the   cattle carriages of a train. These airless carriages were cramped and the women spent the night in them. The following day the travelled the many hours to Loebok Lingau. So many people did not live to reach their destination.

Sr Betty Jeffrey described their journey as dreadful. Everyone was weakened.

The camp was in an abandoned rubber plantation. High on a hill. There was a creek running through the two halves of the women’s camp. The accommodation was in a dirty rat-infested state. The creek soon became contaminated. The health of the inhabitants deteriorated significantly due to the small amount of food and illness leading to high death rates.

The nurses were weakened due to lack of food and the constant threat of disease. Despite this they managed to offer some succour to those in the camp. They could bathe the patients and give them a drink or perhaps assist them to eat a small amount of rice. They had nothing but care and compassion to offer  and some words of encouragement.

It is thought that approximately 89 women died in the camp at Belalau. Another four nurses would die at this camp. One died after the war had finished.

The end of the war came but the nurses did not know that it had ended. They wouldn’t know until Captain Seki Kazuo addressed the women. On the 24th of August he climbed onto a table and announced that the war was over and that we could now be friends. He never said who the victors of the war were.

The Japanese would throw open the doors of the store room which held Red Cross packages with food and medicine in them. The nurses had suffered the deprivation of these items as had everyone in the camp. Undoubtedly the death rate could have been less significant.

Because the camp was well hidden amongst the trees in a place where the allies hadn’t been able to find the nurses. Finally, Gideon Jacob had flown over the camp and saw fabric moving amongst the trees. Major Tebbutt who had been on the SS VYNER BROOKE with the nurses had insisted that they must be somewhere in Sumatra. Indeed they were.

Food was parachuted into the camps. The nurses enjoyed Vegemite on bread!

Liberation on 16th September 1945
Still wearing their uniforms.

On the 24th of September Matron Annie Sage and Sister Floyd , one of the nurses who had belonged to the 2/10th and was evacuated on the EMPIRE STAR, and Sister Chandler arrived by plane to collect the nurses. Matron Sage had taken sixty-five lipsticks for the nurses. When she arrived she saw the small number of nurses and she asked of the nurses, “where are you all?” She realised that this was all that was left of the 65 nurses. She declared that she was the mother of them all. A profound moment. Only 24 nurses had survived the war.

They left for Singapore by plane with Sister Chandler. The nurses arrived and were taken to St Patricks Hospital – the place where so many of them had been before they left Singapore. They gradually gained weight but the soft beds were too much for some of them who slept on the hard floor. They were befriended by Lady Edwina Mountbatten who had a keen interest in their story and wellbeing. She would visit the Nurses Memorial Centre in Melbourne when she visited the nurses in Australia.

The nurses travelled home on the AHS Manunda and arrived in Freemantle, Western Australia on the 23rd of October. The nurses would finally be home on Australian soil.

The nurses had a special bond. They would talk to each other often and would meet up often. They would speak of what had happened to them and how they had survived to each other but they didn’t talk of their ordeal to others. Many returned to nursing and others married. Others were never well enough to go back to nursing. Vivian Bullwinkel went to the War Crimes Tribunal in Tokyo.

She was a notable nurse who returned home. She had a full career. She worked at the Repatriation Hospital in Melbourne and she resigned her post as Lieutenant in 1947 and later became the Matron of Fairfield Infectious Diseases Hospital. She was the president of the Victorian College of Nursing (precursor of the Australian College of Nursing).

She was a decorated nurse who was awarded the Royal Red Cross Medal 2nd class, the Florence Nightingale Medal, an MBE and an AO.

She contacted and kept in touch with all of the families of the nurses who were massacred on Banka Island writing to them all at Christmas and special occasions when she knew that it would have been tough for them.

She was a most revered nurse who will this year have a statue unveiled at the Australian War Memorial in not only her honour but for all the nurses who were lost on Banka Island.

This is an Australian story, a story of women, a story of war, and it is a story that we must never forget.

Lest we forget.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

WHITE COOLIES by Betty Jeffrey

J.P.L Kickhefer – Illustrations from White Coolies

The Muntok Peace Museum- muntokpeacemuseum.org

Australian War Museum – www.awm.gov.au

National Archives of Australia – www.naa.gov.au

The Australian Nurses Memorial Centre, Melbourne – admin@nmc.org.au


Appendix 1

AUSTRALIAN NURSES KILLED AT THE TIME OF BOMBING OF SS VYNER BROOKE OR SHORTLY AFTER:

Matron Olive Paschke – Victoria, aged 37

Kathleen Kinsella – Victoria, aged 37

Louvima Bates – Western Australia, aged 32

Ellenour Calnan – Queensland, aged 29

Mary Clarke -NSW, aged 30

Millicent Dorsch -South Australia, aged 29

Caroline Ennis –Victoria, aged 28

Gladys McDonald – Queensland, aged 32

Lavinia Russell – NSW, aged 32

Marjory Schuman – NSW, aged 31

Merle Trennery -South Australia, aged 32

Mona Wilton – Victoria, aged 28

AUSTRALIAN NURSES MASSACRED ON RADJI BEACH, BANKA ISLAND

Matron Irene Drummond – South Australia, 36

Alma Beard – Western Australia, aged 29

Elaine Balfour-Ogilvy – South Australia, aged 30

Joyce Bridge – NSW, aged 34

Florence Casson – South Australia, aged 38

Mary (Beth) Cuthbertson – Victoria, aged 31

Dorothy (Bud) Elmes – NSW, aged 28

Lorna Fairweather – South Australia, aged 29

Peggy Farmaner – Western Australia, aged 28

Clarice Halligan – Victoria, aged 37

Nancy Harris – NSW, aged 31

Minnie Hodgson- Western Australia, aged 33

Ellen (Nell) Keats – South Australia, aged 26

Janet Kerr – NSW – aged 31

Eleanor McGlade – NSW, aged 38

Kathleen Neuss – NSW, aged 30

Florence Salmon – NSW, aged 26

Esther Jean Stewart – NSW, aged 37

Mona Tait – NSW, aged 27

Rosetta Wight – Victoria, aged 33

Bessie Wilmott – Western Australia, aged 28

AUSTRALIAN NURSES WHO DIED IN MUNTOK, BANKA ISLAND

Wilhelmina Raymont – Tasmania, aged 33

Irene ‘Rene’ Singleton – Victoria, aged 36

Pauline Blanche Hempstead – Queensland, aged 36

Dora Shirley Gardam – Tasmania, aged 34

AUSTRALIAN NURSES WHO DIED IN BELALAU, SUMATRA

Gladys Hughes – Victoria, aged 36

Winnie May Davis – NSW, aged 30

Pearl Mittleheuser – Queensland, aged 41 (died 18/08/1945)

NURSES WHO RETURNED HOME TO AUSTRALIA

Vivian Bullwinkel

Betty Jeffrey

Nesta James

Carrie (Jean) Ashton

Kathleen (Pat) Blake

Jessie Blanch

Veronica Clancy

Cecilia Delforce

Jess Doyle

Jean (Jenny) Greer

Janet (Pat) Gunther

Ellen (Mavis) Hannah

Iole Harper

Violet McElna

Sylvia Muir

Wilma Young

Christian Oxley

Eileen Short

Jessie Simon

Valerie Smith

Ada Syer

Florence Trotter

Joyce Tweddell

Beryl Woodbridge


Appendix 2

NURSING AND MEDICAL STAFF IN SUMATRAN PRISON CAMPS, NOT INCLUDING AUSTRALIAN ARMY NURSES 

Edith Florence Bedell, Nurse *

Frank Bell, Nursing orderly (Padang Men’s Camp)

Catherine Boudville, Singapore General Hospital (Padang Camp)

Phyllis Briggs, Nurse *

Rachel Brooks, Nurse

Edith Castle, Colonial Nursing Sister *

Mary Charman, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Harley Clark, Dentist (Men’s Camp)

Marjorie Hindaugh Cocke, St John’s Ambulance Volunteer *

Marjorie Cooke, Nurse *

Mary Cooper, QA Nursing Sister*

Jessie Coupland, Nurse, Malayan Nursing Service *

Elsie Crowe, Gynaecologist  (Padang internee)

Naomi Davies, QA Nursing Sister, (Padang Camp)

Joy Dexter, Health visitor, Women and Children’s clinic *

Ruth Dickson, QA Nursing Sister *

M. Dlish, Nurse *

Ethel Eveling, 12th Indian General Hospital, (Padang and Bankinang Camps)

Heather Fisher, Australian Nurse, Malayan Nursing Service, (Padang Camp)

Phyllis Fonseca, Combined Singapore General Hospital (Padang and Bankinang Camps)

Dr Annamaria Goldberg-Curth ?neurologist *

Louisa Harley, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang Camp)

Hilda Hobbs, Nurse  (Padang Camp)

Kathleen Homer, Nurse *

Mary Jenkin, Medical Auxiliary Service *

Kathleen Jenkins, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang Camp)

Marjorie Jennings, Nurse *

K.E. Kong, Nurse *

Beatrice Lazar, Indian General Hospital, Singapore, (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Dr Lentze (former director Pangkalpinang Hospital) (Men’s Camp)

Doreen Lewis, Indian General Hospital, Singapore, (Padang and Bankinang Camps

Marjorie Lyon, Doctor (Padang Camp)

Janet Macalister, Nurse *

Brenda Macduff, Nurse (Padang Camp)

Helen Mackenzie, Nurse *

Freda Mackinnon, Assistant Matron, Penang General Hospital

Lydia Maclean, QA Nursing Service (Padang Camp)

Marjory Malmanche, Nurse (Padang Camp)

Mary McCallum, Nurse *

Jean McDowell, Doctor *

Rennie McFie, Nurse *

Albert McKern Doctor (Men’s Camp )

Nell McMillan, Nurse (Padang and Bankinang Camps)

Laura Mepham, Nurse  (Padang Camp)

Olga Neubronner, Colonial Service Nursing Sister, St John’s Ambulance, Singapore *

Sally Oldham, Nurse *

Joan Powell, Nurse*

Violet Pulford, Nurse *

Alice Rossie, Nurse *

Ruth Russell Roberts, MAS Ambulance driver *

Hyda Scott-Eames, MAS Nurse *

Agnes Service, Nurse  (Padang Camp)

Constance Smith, Doctor, Women and Children’s welfare officer *

Jean Smith, Nurse (Padang Camp)

Netta Smith, Nurse *

Violet Spedding, QA Matron (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Hugh Stubbs, Doctor  (Men’s Camp )

Dr Tay (Men’s Camp)

C.P. (Phyllis) Thane, VAD Nurse *

Margaret Thompson, Doctor *

Margot Turner, QA Nursing Sister *

Mabel Waugh, Matron, Kuala Lipis, (Padang Camp)

George West, Doctor (Men’s Camp )

Kathleen Woodman, QA Nursing Sister  (Padang and Bankinang Camps )

Also 40 Catholic Nuns and a large number of Catholic brothers who cared for dysentery patients in the Men’s camp (11 brothers died doing this work)

* Denotes those British medical /nursing personnel who were in camp with the Australian Nurses 1942-1945

2023 Conference Report

Our wonderful speakers from 2023 have written blog posts to summarise their talks. You can read them all here.

Emily Sharp: How Nations Come to Remember the Second World War in Changi Differently

This paper is a case study as to why nations perceive and present the same information differently and thus understand how cultural bias and the needs of a country affect national perceptions and memories. It uses the case study of Changi as the specific geographical location and a short time scale allows for in depth analysis. The Japanese have been deliberately neglected in this paper, despite also being a main actor at Changi, due to my limited Japanese language skills.

Contents

I will begin with a brief overview of some of the existing literature. I will then cover actual events which took place at Changi during the Second World War, so we have an established timeline to compare media coverage of Changi. We will then compare newspaper reporting from all three nations to understand the origins of the narratives within each nation before finally analysing and comparing modern media coverage to that which was contemporaneous. I will then conclude this presentation.

Existing Literature

Previous war memory research is mainly focused on the Holocaust, individual countries and how generational perceptions or memories present the past. They all fit into one of three categories: the transmission and evolution of memory (such as Halbawchs, Hirsch and Hunt), the relationship between national identity and national memory (such as Rothberg, Harper, Noakes and Melling) and the creation of commemoration sites (such as Muzaini and Yeoh, West and Blackburn), they do not consider the perceptions of these groups to compare why there are different national memories of an event.

Background

Fifty thousand Allied troops were captured at the fall of Singapore and held in Changi Barracks which became the POW headquarters in Singapore.[1]

For many POWs, Changi was just the transit stop on route to working parties around Malaya and further afield.[2] From the fifteen thousand Australian troops entering Changi in February 1942, only two-thousand-five-hundred remained by the middle of 1943 due to relocations for work parties.[3]

The daily food allocation for a prisoner in 1942 had fewer calories than international pre-war scientists had believed a man could survive on.[4] Trade with local people outside the camp allowed a thriving black market.[5] All commodities were sold including food and a prominent medical drug selling ring.[6]

Ailments suffered by POWs included nutritional deficiencies and skin diseases which never healed due to the tropical climate.[7] Diarrhoea and dysentery outbreaks occurred within a fortnight of arrival at Changi, but cases declined once fly-proof latrines had been built.[8] In March 1943 a Malaria outbreak was caused by men returning to Changi from work parties in Thailand.[9]

Whilst British and Australian POWs were held in Changi Barracks, Changi Gaol was used to intern civilians. The exact number of CIs interned Singapore will never be known as “records were often lost, destroyed or simply not kept”.[10]

As with the POWs in the barracks, in Changi gaol there was overcrowding: seven people would share a cell eight feet wide by twelve feet long and contained a toilet.[11] Some overcrowding was alleviated by converting functional areas, such as laundry rooms.[12]

Cells were never locked, and CIs would be accompanied by guards on trips including shopping for extra food and swimming to alleviate skin ailments.[13] Here too a black market flourished, often used by guards themselves to supplement their wages.[14]

There was a period where conditions for CIs significantly declined, known as the Double Tenth Incident.[15] The Japanese wrongly assumed that when six Japanese cargo ships and one Japanese oil tanker were destroyed off the coast of Singapore it had been the work of saboteurs within the gaol and Japanese military police, or Kempeitai, were brought in to investigate and control the camp.[16] Food rations decreased, physical punishments, increased and essentially “the whole camp was punished”.[17] Fifty four men and three women were taken to Outram Road Prison for questioning and torture, those that survived did not return for six months.[18]

Soon after the this ended all internees were moved to the former military barracks at Sime Road to make room for ten thousand military POWs returning from the Burma-Thailand Railway.[19]

For Singaporeans Changi had two significant involvements during the Japanese Occupation. First, locals would smuggle and/or trade food and medicines to POWs and CIs.[20] Second, Singaporean locals were involved in smuggling at local canteens considered a “hot bed for exchanging messages and necessities such as food, medication and even radio parts” to POWs who would pass through on their work parties.[21]

Changi also holds significance for Singaporeans as part of what was known by the Japanese as Dai Kensho (the great inspection) and to Chinese as Sook Ching (cleansing).[22] Over a fortnight, it is estimated fifty thousand people were executed along beaches, including Changi, to rid Singapore of anti-Japanese elements.[23] Victims were tied and loaded onto lorries and transported to remote sites, like Changi beach, to be massacred.[24] To dispose of the bodies mass graves were dug (sometimes by POWs) or the victims were shot along the shoreline to allow the sea to wash away the corpses.[25]

Contemporaneous

Newspaper articles from 1 February 1942 to 1 January 1946 which include reports of Changi will be analysed to see how these events were reported within each nation. This period was chosen to include reporting during the Japanese Occupation and during the liberation of Singapore. The articles were located within the three main national newspaper archives for each country: National Library of Australia’s Trove Archive, British Newspaper Archive, and the National Library of Singapore eNewspapers.

The first reporting of Changi in Australia brought news that British forces had been interned at the “fortress” and confirmation that Australian forces had also been captured followed.[26] Information coming out of Singapore was severely limited due to ongoing war in the region and was biased due to Japanese censorship. Australian press had the primary aim of relaying basic information to the public and then ensuring citizens did not panic hearing this news.

In Britain, most reports that came out during 1942 also focused on the POWs that had been taken. The Daily Record reported an interview that Lieutenant-General Percival had conducted with the Japanese Newspaper Nichi Nichi and included such information as “We have enough food to eat and our daily needs are satisfied, but we should like a little more water”.[27] British Press focused on disseminating basic information about those in Singapore, but it was wise not to panic the population. Finally, with the war in the West also progressing, this loss would not have been focused on.

Singaporean press was directly controlled by the Japanese during the occupation. The first reports in 1942 about Changi reinforced the image of Japanese liberating Singapore from western enemies. Reports started to be produced about British mistreatment of the Japanese during their rule and the Battle for Singapore, including one alleging Japanese men had suffocated whilst being transported by the British due to lack of air from overcrowding and exposure to the sun.[28] Singaporean Press was aiming to rouse the local population into supporting the Japanese.

This trend of using Singaporean press to report British atrocities during the Battle for Singapore continued into 1943.  The Syonan Shimbun had a headline “British Atrocity Revelations” which detailed how the British rounded up three hundred men on suspicion they were pro-Japanese and interned them in multiple prisons.[29] The article reported some of these men were kept forty to a cell only built to hold twelve and they were only released on the 13 February 1942, just before Singapore was surrendered.[30]

The Changi area featured within Singaporean press with details about the expansion of Changi market. One example is the article which reported over twenty stalls at the Changi market belonged to Malay stallholders and that more Malays were turning to the trade.[31] This praise encouraged more locals to become self-sufficient. Praising Malays was another way to divide the different cultures within the Singaporean population and to marginalise Chinese citizens who the Japanese believed were supportive of the British.

Australian press in 1943 saw more details of those being held at Changi emerge and that civilians were also held, such as the example on the screen. Again, this report is focused on stating necessary information whilst providing reassurance.

British press in 1943 also had not changed and newspapers featured multiple stories with names of those interned, particularly in local newspapers.[32] Some of these articles published details of captivity revealed to family members in mail received from internees. The Dundee Courier stated Mr Porter’s wife had received a postcard in which he stated he was “safe, fit and in good cheer”.[33] Again, British press is following the same pattern as the Australians.

In 1944, British press focused on reporting that “information received by the Colonial Office and British Red Cross indicates that civilian internees have been transferred from Changi Camp, Singapore Island to a camp in Sime Road, near Singapore”.[34] Once again, British Press is seen to be presenting facts but little else. One theory for this could be the British were more focused on the war in the West as this was closer to home and showed Britain in a more victorious light. It can also be explained by the fact that due to Japanese censorship, not much mail was coming out of Singapore and as the war became more intense between Japan and the US the Japanese were less willing to give any details to the Allies.

Australia’s press, however, managed to get more details due to some prisoners being transported from Changi managing to escape and return home. These details focussed on the Sook Ching massacre and Australian prisoners’ involvement with burying the bodies. According to these reports, Chinese were tied in groups of three along Changi beach and machine gunned, one afternoon one hundred and six Chinese people were buried.[35] Each mass grave usually held about one hundred people.[36] These shock stories allowed the Australian press to sell stories by unveiling the true horrors of what was happening at Changi whilst also allowing the public to stay calm. Whilst this was a horrifically barbaric act, the Japanese were targeting the Chinese.

There nothing of significance reported about Changi within Singaporean press during 1944. There are two plausible reasons for this, the first that the Japanese believed they finally had control and as such the POWs did not need to be presented in such a bad light. The second is similar to the reason the British press reported very little, that as the Japanese position in the war weakened the flow of information became more restricted. This ensured the Japanese kept power by keeping the population   uninformed.

1945 Newspapers contained the most reports featuring Changi in all three nations, particularly in September and October, when the Japanese Occupation ended and released prisoners were sent home. In Australia, details about conditions within Changi camp began to emerge for example those imprisoned were “subsisting just above starvation level” and yet made to work a twelve-hour day to build Changi airfield.[37] These reports directly opposed earlier stories that Changi was more than adequate, and food was in great supply.

More reports of atrocities committed against the Chinese also emerged. Sergeant Blain, in the Morning Bulletin, stated the Japanese had killed Chinese women by decapitation for stealing and Australian POWs had to collect the heads and display them on sticks to serve as a warning.[38] These further details have the shock factor that so often accompanies newspaper stories.

Another theme that took over the coverage of Changi in 1945 was the spirit of the prisoners. The Telegraph stated that “the belief that the rest of the AIF would one day return and release us never wavered in the hearts of the men of the Eight Division”.[39] The Daily Mercury remarked on “the cleanliness, orderliness and self-discipline of prisoners, notably the Australians”.[40] Further examples of Australians defying the Japanese and “ingenuity of the Australian soldier under the most unfavourable conditions” including making items such as spring lid tobacco cases and razors from scratch, emerged.[41] This defiance and attitude gives the public a story meaning they can take pride in the actions of their men, even though they had been defeated and captured. This allows the country to feel patriotism and pride over something which could otherwise cause shame.

In a letter to the Sun the lack of coverage of civilians who had been interned was questioned.[42] This shows that Australian authorities and the press themselves were more focused on those that had been captured from the military. This may have been because military members had more experiences of brutality to report (having been sent to work on projects such as the Burma-Thai Railway, which civilians rarely served on).

Reports did emerge of the Double Tenth Incident which detailed how twelve people died due to a Kempeitai investigation to find spies in the gaol.[43] Plus, further claims of mistreatment emerged with the story men had lost up to five stone each during their internment.[44] It seems the press would report on the most shocking stories of internment rather than how it had been in daily life. There were multiple reports of the Double Tenth Incident but few featured stories from the rest of the interment of civilians.

British press in 1945 also had a focus on liberated prisoners and hardships they had endured. Sergeant Crockett stated he saw men forced to stand naked, outside, in the hot sun for up to five days as punishment for minor misdemeanours.[45] The Nottingham Evening Post contained information that “ex-prisoners were so thin that their ribs could be counted 20 yards away” and four or five people would usually share a cell which measured seven feet by twelve feet.[46] Again, this served a similar purpose as the Australian press. To give the British press the horror stories which the public seem to enjoy and give them something to be proud of. Their men may have been interned but they endured a lot and they should be proud of them for not only surviving but also regaining control of Singapore.

This is also seen with the story of how four hundred British women marched ten miles to Changi camp singing “There’ll always be an England” featuring in several publications including the Derby Daily Telegraph.[47] This reflects the rebellious behaviour of Australian POWs. This act once more gives the public a personal link to these stories through shared patriotism.

The Singaporean press in 1945 also focused on hardships that those interned had endured, describing those recently liberated as “moving skeletons” and documenting two hundred and twenty deaths had occurred at Changi and Sime Road camps.[48] At this point Singapore had been retaken by the British so the press switched bias from the Japanese back towards the British. As a result, the Singaporean press was more sympathetic towards British views after the liberation. In the same way as the Japanese had reported the behaviour of the British to justify their own actions, the British were reporting on Japanese crimes to justify and gain support for the upcoming war trials of the Japanese.

Finally, accounts of the Sook Ching massacre were also reported in Singaporean press. The Malaya Tribune featured an account of an escape from a massacre at Changi beach by Wong Peng Yin and The Straits Times reported Chinese bodies being buried after the Japanese murdered them and survivors being sheltered.[49] As the Chinese had been marginalised and persecuted under the Japanese these atrocities were finally being reported fully to the Singaporean public. First-hand accounts and the ability to speak about the ordeal provided a way to show the Japanese no longer had censorship powers and demonstrated support for the Chinese portion of the public.

British and Australian press appears to have had similar motives throughout the Japanese Occupation and immediately after the liberation of Singapore. In 1942 and 1943 the primary aim was to reassure the public about those taken POW, whilst still relaying the facts. In 1944, British press still followed this pattern; however, the Australians manged to gain a ‘scoop’ obtaining information from men who had managed to escape and began to disseminate some of the true horrors that were occurring at Changi. There still was not a huge cause for concern amongst the public as the brutality had been targeted against the Chinese and Australians were merely being tasked with cleaning up the aftermath (as being reported at the time). In contrast, Singaporean press in 1942 and 1943 was used to attempt to turn the Singaporean population against the British justifying the Japanese occupation and internment of Allied forces. As the war turned against the Japanese so too did the flow of information from them regarding the Allies. This retained the illusion of stability, supremacy, and power over the Westerners and prevented any ideas of revolt. In 1945 all press, now every nation was under Allied control, had bias towards the Allies. The main purpose was to show the horrors the men had survived and to portray internees as heroic and patriotic. Thus, what would have been an embarrassing defeat was instead portrayed as a jubilant victory and heroic story of survival. In Singapore this went further as it aimed to unite the population’s support for war trials and influence their opinion into the Japanese guilt. It also portrayed the Japanese occupation as far worse than the British rule to quell any revolts at the British regaining command. Finally, Singaporean coverage of the Sook Ching massacre aimed to reintegrate the Chinese and stop them from feeling persecuted, by bringing legitimacy to their claims of atrocities carried out against them.

Modern

Now that historical perceptions have been analysed we can assess modern-day perceptions and compare them.

Online media has become one of the main ways the public receives news. To get a true picture of modern public perceptions of Changi during the Second World War it is necessary to also look at online news articles. This project has limited online news articles to one organisation per country. Media organisations with both an online and television presence considered the ‘national’ channel of each country was picked. For Australia this was ABC and in Britain this was the BBC. In Singapore, MediaCorp is the most government influenced organisation however this in a conglomerate of individually branded channels and stations. To make a fair and direct comparison between this and the other nations, the brand Channel NewsAsia was selected as this is the most news focused.

The timeframe used for archive searches was 1 January 2000 to the date which searches were conducted on during 2017 (exact access dates are in the footnotes). This broad time frame allows for several political changes in leadership (excluding Singapore where the PAP have been in power since independence) thus attempting to limit any political bias found in the news articles surveyed.

One event reported on in all three nations was the Singaporean government’s decision to demolish parts of Changi Gaol in 2003 for renovation and expansion to make it more suitable for modern day usage. Ultimately this one incident serves as a microcosm for the rest of this section. The main perceptions of Australia and Britain are strongly exhibited within the articles reporting on the demolition. Australia reported that this announcement had caused anger amongst the public who felt the building should be preserved in memory of those that had suffered there, although a minority disagreed feeling the prison was nothing more than “old buildings”.[50] The national feeling was so strong the Australian government even lobbied Singapore for its preservation, though this was ultimately unsuccessful.[51] This shows how strongly the national connection to Changi was felt. Trying to interfere in another nation’s internal affairs demonstrates the Australians were trying to execute a claim over the memories, history, and sentiment of the building rather than the land it was on. This shows Changi is a site of national importance to Australians even though it lies overseas.

In Britain there were also calls for the prison to be preserved however, reports of this focussed on the Australian campaigns as they were more vocal in their lobbying than the British were.[52] This shows that whilst Britain disagreed with the demolishing of Changi prison they did not view it as having the same level of importance. The fact that British press focused mostly on Australian lobbying, and not lobbying themselves, suggests that the British, whilst sympathetic to the Australians, felt that it was less their fight and more of an issue for Australia. This is probably because the Fall of Singapore and internment was the biggest event for Australians during the Second World War whereas in Britain more focus was spent within the European theatre of war. The Second World War in Europe was also considered more of a victory for the British, where they pushed back and quashed the Axis forces. Changi therefore became a place where there were fewer soldiers and those that were there had ultimately surrendered and lost. This was a part of history which was less favourable to the British.

In Singapore most of the reporting focused on trying to understand why Australia was “making such a fuss about it” and there was some resentment felt as to why Australia felt they could throw “their weight around and ask a small country to preserve something few Singaporeans really care about?”.[53] There was a minority who felt that the prison was a place where relatives of those who had been prisoner could “pay their respects and feel a connection to those who have gone”, especially for those that were buried in unmarked graves or at sea, and that it even served as a connection to their past for Singaporeans.[54] The general consensus of the population, and the Singaporean government seemed to be best summed up by Joy Frances in her opinion piece for TODAY: “Why should dead, or almost dead, ex-prisoners take precedence over living, currently incarcerated ones?”.[55] Singapore’s focus has always been on moving forward and replacing old with new to modernise and keep buildings practical. The need for modernisation, practicality and living quality for Singaporeans massively outweighs any form of sentiment for the past. Additionally, Singapore feels this is not particularly relevant to their history as it mainly affected Australian and British nationals. It is therefore not advantageous to Singapore to save the building to please other nationalities’ citizens at the cost of providing substandard facilities to its own.

Overall, the Singaporean government did concede a little and ultimately “the Changi Prison entrance, gate, wall and turrets were gazetted by [NHB] as the Republic’s 72nd National Monument”.[56] This allowed the Singaporean government to preserve some diplomatic relations with Australia (and pacify the few lobbyists at home) whilst also achieving its first goal of improving the prison’s infrastructure. This allowed Singapore to preserve what is ultimately a tourist attraction, to allow those on a pilgrimage to pay their respects.

Tourism and exhibitions surrounding the Second World War at Changi were further mentioned in the press with the Light after Dark tour operated by Duck Tours for the sixtieth anniversary of the end of the second World War.[57] Humphreys remarked that “during the tour, he was “[astonished] to watch [his] guide recount the basic facts of the Sook Ching massacre for the benefit of several young Singaporeans (and their parents) in the group”.[58]

These commemorative events, as well as providing a draw for pilgrimages from other nations also provide a way for the Singaporean government to educate the public. It also allows for reinforcement of the message that Singapore needs to retain its ‘resilience’ and ‘unity’ so it is never dependent, and subsequently let down, by another nation again. This fortifies the need for Singapore to keep moving forward economically and infrastructurally so that it is a strong nation both within Asia and the rest of the World. It also justifies National Service, so the small nation can defend itself in the future.

Whilst reporting on Changi gate becoming a national monument, NHB stated it was “in remembrance of Singapore’s wartime experience and also [served] as a “grim reminder” of when Singapore was surrendered to the Japanese during World War II”.[59] Singaporean press also focused on the significance of the Changi POW camp, referring to it as “the main POW camp in Southeast Asia” putting the idea across that Changi was a form of epicentre for Japanese activities, and therefore atrocities.[60] This reinforces the idea that Singapore needs to be a truly independent nation so that the horrors of history cannot repeat themselves.

This theme also regularly emerged within British press; the fact that the Fall of Singapore had been the “biggest disaster in British history” and it was this that had led to the internment of POWs and civilians at Changi.[61] Again it can be seen that this is closely related to the victorious underdog mentality.

This theme of British disaster featured heavily within Australian press, two articles, for example, quote Winston Churchill as saying Singapore was “the worst disaster and capitulation in British history”.[62] In contrast to the British press, however, this allows the Australians to portray internment and the capture of Singapore as solely Britain’s fault. This centralising of POW stories within Australia’s Second World War history shows this really is considered the core event of the war for Australians. The POW with his fighting spirit shows that Australians want to portray themselves much like the British Bulldog who comes from unfavourable conditions to be victorious. The POW stories perfectly summarise this as they have become part of the public memory where citizens can show their nationalistic pride in these icons who portray the Australian stereotype.

Despite being one milder camps, the consensus of Australian national memory of Changi is that it represents the harsh conditions faced, and overcome, by Australian POWs and the heart of Australia’s Second World War history. It is for this reason that a common theme in both the Australian and British press, as Christina Twomey wrote, is the relation of the experiences of those interned in Changi as part of the overarching story line of the horrors experienced by those sent to work on the Burma-Thai Railway. Peek follows this pattern twice in her article on the seventieth anniversary of the Fall of Singapore stating one soldier “due to his weakened physical state, … avoided being sent to work on the Thai/Burma railway on the pretext he was being sent to a camp for medical treatment”.[63] This once again can be seen to portray the British soldier as coming turning a weakened position into a victory.

Australian press also merges the Burma-Thai railway with most accounts following the structure of Aaron Hall’s and Shae Johnson’s report: “his [Bevan Warland-Browne] unit was captured amid the shambles of the Malayan collapse and they were imprisoned in Changi before being sent to work on the [Burma-Thai] railway”.[64] Providing this pattern within the narratives of POW experiences works to standardise the Australian POW experience. This makes these tales become a national story rather than an individual experience, allowing the Australian public to feel connected and familiar with the narrative even if they did not directly experience it. Those accounts that do not fall into the established pattern of interned at Changi sent to the Burma-Thai Railway where they then experienced brutality on an unimaginable scale, are less reported to the point that they are almost forgotten by the nation because they do not fit within the established narrative.

The ABC Radio National series Australians Under Nippon series demonstrates the horrific conditions experienced by POWs with its detailing of the programmes, and their synopses, on the main webpage for the series. The language used instils and reinforces the idea that POWs experienced significant hardships and brutality during their internment. Words such as “sardonic”, “grim”, “brutality and bleakness”, “slave labour gangs” and “wretched” all work to give the impression of sadistic Japanese soldiers operating hellish internment camps. These words are then juxtaposed with words to describe Australians, for example “Australian vernacular” and “extraordinary courage” to place POWs in a heroic light, using their ‘Aussie spirit’ to survive despite the environment working against them.

Conclude

Overall, when these modern reports of the experiences of those interned at Changi are directly compared to reports from the time we can see that whilst perceptions and memories portrayed have their roots in the reports from 1945, some themes have been almost forgotten.

The press amongst all the nations remains biased towards the Allies. There has been no mention of any of the British atrocities that were reported in the Japanese Occupied Singapore newspapers. Changi’s involvement in the Sook Ching massacre has been significantly marginalised within modern media. Despite their soldiers having to help with the burials in the aftermath of the massacres, the Sook Ching massacre goes against the narrative portrayed that Australians and British experienced the most unimaginable and brutal conditions. If another group, in the same area had worse experiences, this undermines the victorious underdog and fighting spirit images that each nation wishes to present and memorialise. Singapore also reduces the significance of the Sook Ching massacre, focusing instead on hardships experienced by all ethnicities. This has the same effect, to unite the nation, as the other major theme within Singaporean press, that they were let down by other countries during the war. For this reason, the Singaporean public needs to work towards the future to have economic, infrastructure and defence power they can defend themselves and avoid the hardships bestowed upon them by the Japanese. Changi is used as the main symbol for this as it is where their ruling power, and supposed protectors ended up locked away.

Finally, the themes of turning the embarrassing defeat and atrocious conditions experienced by the POWs into a jubilant victory where the Japanese were defeated, and the men survived against the odds portrayed in 1945 can be clearly seen in the press today. The actions of heroic and patriotic POWs are clearly represented as the victorious British underdog and the Australian spirit and humour stereotypes within national perceptions.


Jan Slimming: Captured at Singapore

CAPTURED AT SINGAPORE – A Diary of a Far East Prisoner of War.

Jan Slimming gave an outline of her father’s story during the conference dinner and read a passage from the book about the British Army’s fateful day of surrender, “the worst in British history,” February 15th , 1942. The book was published in 2022 with her twin sister and co-author, Jill
Robertson, who conducted most of the extensive research. Jill was unable to attend the conference as she was in New Zealand, expecting the birth of her first grandchild.


Jan asked the audience, “What would it be like to keep a secret for 50 years, never tell your parents or your children – not even your spouse!?” After the deathly silence and a moment of reflection, we heard how their parents were reluctant to speak about their war years.


Their father’s prisoner of war experience under the Japanese, was too painful to remember and besides the British government told him and his equals to forget their dreadful days of captivity, and their mother was sworn to secrecy via the Official Secrets Act, being one of the Bletchley Park codebreakers integral to winning the war and shortening it by
two years.


Imagine. Their story began in England, when they were six and started asking questions about why their father watched horrific black and white war movies on Sunday afternoon TV. It was then he explained he had been a prisoner during the war. “A Prisoner!” This news was shocking to their young ears. They thought he had committed a crime, but he explained a prisoner of war was different. “Anyway, it was a long time ago,” he said, “and not something for little girls to worry about.” War was something he didn’t want them to ever experience. Over the decades they learned limited amounts about his 3½ year incarceration in Changi Jail, Singapore, the shared the experiences, those who did not come back, and that his family back in London did not know if he was dead or alive for nearly two years.


The idea for the books came about in 2012 when Jan met an American Codebreaker – Janice Martin Benario – a WAVE who was born in Baltimore, worked in Washington DC and lived in Atlanta, close to where Jan and her family reside. Jan recorded her story and this became the catalyst and framework for research into her parents’ war years, alongside a few snippets of information they revealed, and mysterious papers and photographs hidden in a blanket box at the foot of
their bed.


Jill had also met a Royal Engineer POW, Fergus Anckorn, and was gathering more about his Changi experience as their father was no longer alive to tell them, except for the tiny address book he’d kept hidden as a secret diary and the recording he made for Jan on her small tape cassette in 1990.


Well organized, with lighter and serious moments, their interlinked books are chronological for the most part. Robertson and Slimming also believe, ironically, that the Atom Bomb saved their father’s life, since an enemy plan was afoot to kill all POWs soon after the Japanese surrendered, August 15th , 1945. “We might never have existed.” Jan lamented.



Published by Pen & Sword Books.com

Terry Smyth: Captive Fathers, Captive Children

Captive Fathers, Captive Children:Legacies of the War in the Far East

Terry Smyth, PhD
Community Fellow, Department of History, University of Essex

We now know a great deal about the hardships suffered by the
POWs, but the children’s stories have been rarely heard. I wrote
my book to redress this situation.

Inevitably, the story starts with my father, Edwin Smyth, who was a
gunner in the Light Anti-Aircraft Regiment Royal Artillery. This is a
studio portrait taken before he left for the Far East.

Dad 1940 b.jpg



And these are photos taken in the camp, Hiroshima 6b. The story
lies in the eyes, that haunted look.


Dad as POW 117.jpg


From my earliest days, I began to wonder how my childhood
experiences compared with those of other children of FEPOWs.
So, the research began with nagging questions. How did other
children experience their childhoods? What was their family life
like? Did they get to know much about their father’s wartime
experiences? Did their fathers talk about it?


The basic research for the book was undertaken as part of a
PhD that I completed in 2017 at the University of Essex. I collected
my data through a series of forty mainly face-to-face interviews
with children of FEPOWs, plus follow-up emails. All interviews
were lengthy, unstructured, and in-depth, and used a
‘psychosocial’ approach.


Some of the accounts were difficult to listen to because they
described behaviours and family crises that in some cases were
felt to be embarrassing or even shameful. Despite this, families
displayed great resilience and courage in the face of hugely
challenging circumstances. All family situations are unique, of
course, but in the book I do my best to throw light on these
complex dynamics.

The book was published in 2023 by Bloomsbury Academic in their
Social and Cultural History series
, and is also out in paperback.
There is a discount code – GLR BD8UK – if ordered via the Bloomsbury website but I don’t know how long this will be valid for.


Exterior cover.png


I wrote the book for people like me – like us – to encourage
reflection on our individual and family experiences, to show how
the children of FEPOWs have remembered and commemorated
their fathers’ lives, and how different memory practices were
rooted in the experience of captivity.


Equally importantly, I wanted to share my research findings
with readers whose academic, professional or personal interests
lay in the long-term effects of war trauma, or were curious about
the psychosocial research methodology. I also drew on my
personal experiences when they complemented or extended the
research. In doing so, I came to feel an integral part of the
research process, more a partner and less of an observer.

The book comprises seven main chapters, with a Foreword by Sir
Tim Hitchens who was the British Ambassador to Japan between
2012 and 2016. I was lucky enough to meet him at a memorial
event in Japan in 2014.

These are the chapter headings:

Chapter 1 Life In Captivity
Where it all began: the fathers’ experiences in the Far East.

Chapter 2 Bringing War into the Home
The repatriation process and the transition from captivity to
domesticity. The wide-ranging impact of the fathers’ return on the
families, and how the children remembered their childhoods.

Chapter 3 Remembering and Commemorating
The complex nature of individual and collective memory and
forgetting; the process of remembrance and commemoration.

Chapter 4 Finding Meaning in Memories
How we work with our memories and the idea of ‘memory
practice’, i.e. any activity designed to give meaning to our
memories. This chapter forms a bridge between childhood
memories and the memory practices of adulthood.

Chapter 5 Home as a Site of Remembrance
How memories are expressed and commemorated in the home.

Chapter 6 The Search for Military Family Histories
The search for the facts of our fathers’ captivity, and the links with
wider family history.

Chapter 7 Place and Pilgrimage
The desire to ‘walk where they walked’. The emotional, intellectual
and ethical impacts of journeys to places associated with the
father’s war.

Inevitably, many words are left unsaid in the main body of the text.
Loose ends abound, as do voids that couldn’t be filled along the
way. In response to this, I wrote an Afterword that is in three
discrete sections: I reflect further on, firstly, the personal sources
of this research; secondly, on the exciting unpredictability of
fieldwork, and thirdly, the discomfort implicit in acknowledging the
humanity of the ‘other’ (in this case, the Japanese people). My aim
has been to keep the door ajar and to smooth the path for
empathy, imagination and further research.

Gautam Hazarika: We Published in Prison

BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR CHANGI CIVILIANS BY GAUTAM HAZARIKA, June 29, 2023

Background

After Britain surrendered Singapore to Japan on February 15, 1942, besides the POWs, 1,379 (1) civilians were interned. They were mainly colonial bureaucrats, businessmen, doctors etc, and included 182 women and children. Their numbers rose to 2,822 as recorded on June 3, 1942, (1) and over 4,000 later during the war. Across the Far East there were over 130,000 civilians interned during the war (Archer, Ref 37)

  1. The numbers are from a census published June 3, 1942, in Changi Guardian (see Ref 47)

The civilian’s experience was in many ways like as that of the POWs – the same lack of food, medicines, clothes, news of the war & of home, they too kept their spirits up with sports, plays, concerts, lessons & the library. However, in some ways their captivity was different from that of the POWs – they were older & less healthy though as time passed the starvation diet perhaps made it as bad for everyone. Luckily, none of these civilians were sent to the Burma railway or New Guinea/ New Britain unlike Western & Indian POWs and Asian civilians who were. In the beginning, the civilians perhaps faced a social shock with senior civilians, those much junior to them, and for example, young merchant seaman all thrown together. Most probably, as time passed such differences mattered less. Many of the women were thrown into the deep end, as most had not worked before, and many had depended on husbands, fathers or brothers taking decisions. And what of the children? For that we need to read A Girl in Changi by Olga Henderson (nee Miller). Then there was enduring the agony of having husbands, wives, and children just around the corner, but being unable to meet due to segregation. There was an interesting way out, the “dustbin” parade (see Ref 50). Every day, women with surnames beginning with A would come out with the bins, and these would be collected by the “A” men they could see each other. No speaking or touching was allowed and this was stopped later.

The last word on this must be Freddy Bloom’s, the editor of the newspaper POW WOW of the segregated women’s camp in Changi. I sense some irritation when she says “To those quibblers who point out we are not POWs but internees we say that as long as we are incarcerated in a gaol we are prisoners” (Ref 50).

This bibliography has the following sections

  1. Books published by internees and historians
  2. Other Bibliographies on this/ similar topics
  3. Camp newspapers
  4. IWM – focus on Harry Miller/ Freddy Bloom (and Annexure 1 on Harry Miller)
  5. Cambridge Changi Archives
  6. Double Tenth 
  1. Books published divided into those by men/women as done by Mr Peng Han Lim (see his Biblio Section B) and added more published later. Note there will be more, perhaps self-published.

By men interned

  1. EP HODKIN – IF THIS COULD BE FAREWELL, 2003, Freemantle Arts Centre Press 
  2. GEORGE PEET – WITHIN CHANGIS WALLS, 2001, Marshall Cavendish Internation Asia
  3. THOMAS KITCHING – LIFE AND DEATH IN CHANGI, Bretchin Tales Shop Ltd 1998, republished Landmark Books Pte Ltd 2018. Transcript of his diary is here https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00001/4 The original diary is now in IWM (Ref 56)
  4. Anthony McNamara I was in prison, self-published 1994
  5. JOHN HAYTER – PRIEST IN PRISON, published Churchman 1989, Thornhil 1991, Graham Brash Pte Ltd, 1991
  6. TYLER THOMPSON – Freedom in Internment Under Japanese Rule in Singapore 1942-1945 , published Kelford Press Pte Ltd (Singapore) nd, 1990?
  7. Changi, the lost years :a Malayan diary, 1941-1945 /T.P.M. Lewis. Published Malaysian Historical Society, 1989
  8. Singapore : through sunshine and shadow BY VAN CUYLENBERG, published Heineman Asia 1982
  9. The Marquis, a tale of Syonan-to BY EJH CORNER, published Heineman Asia 1981
  10. Taman budiman :  memoirs of an unorthodox civil servant /  Tan Sri Dato Mubin Sheppard, published Kuala Lumpur :Heinemann Educational Books (Asia),1979.
  11. Mural ditties and Sime Road soliloquies /  by C.C. Brown ; illustrated by R.W.E. Harper, published Singapore :Kelly & Walsh,[1948]
  12. Prison camp ministries :  the personal narrative of Hobart B. Amstutz, 17 February 1942 to 7 September, 1945 /  Hobart B. Amstutz, published Singapore :  Wesley Manse,  1945.
  13. Changi interlude by Guy Heriot (information courtesy Nigel Stanley)
  14. Life is eternal by James MacIntosh (information courtesy Nigel Stanley)

Online unpublished manuscripts/ diaries

  1. To Those who laughed by W.F.N.Churchill includes manuscript pictorial map of Changi Prison https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00003-00012/1
  2. Diary of a civilian internee in Singapore by Duncan-Wallace https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00017/1
  3. Bryson eating Rubber Seeds and other Internment Memories https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00019/1
  4. ? Singapore Diary by E.A.Ross https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00015-00001/1

IWM reference, content not online

  1. Changi Jail: The Diary of George Huntsman https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1500096204
  2. Journal of an Unidentified Civilian Internee in Singapore, 1942 – 1945

https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1030011404

Books by women/girls interned

  1. In the Grip of a Crisis: The Experiences of a Teenager during the Japanese Occupation of Singapore, 1942-45, RUDY MOSBERGEN, published Singapore Seng City, 2007
  2. Diary of a Girl in Changi by Sheila Allan (a rare Eurasian internee), published by Simon & Schuster Australia 1994 
  3. MARY THOMAS In the Shadow of the Rising Sun, published 1983, repub Singapore Marshall Cavendish 2009
  4. Women beyond the wire :  a story of prisoners of the Japanese, 1942-1945 /  Lavinia Warner and John Sandilands, published Michael Joseph 1982
  5. FREDDY BLOOM’S DEAR PHILIP, published by Bodley Head 1980 + book on her husband (a POW)- book Destined Meeting by Leslie Bell, published Odhams Press 1958
  6. Three Wasted Years, Women in Changi Prison by Gladys Tompkins, privately published in New Zealand 1977
  7. JAILBIRD JOTTINGS BY IRIS PARFITT, Published Kuala Lumpur 1947
  8.  Changi by Mary Cornelius (information courtesy Nigel Stanley)

Unpublished Manuscript online

  1. Muriel Rielly War Diary: Cypher Clerk for Shenton & Duff Cooper, escaped to Australia & worked for American Intelligence https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00024/1

Books on women/ children by others

  1. THOMAS RYAN – A CHILD PRISONER OF WAR – An account by his son Christopher, published by Hakawati Press, Scotland 2021
  2. Taste of Longing, The Ethel Mulvany and her Starving Prisoners of War Cookbook by Suzanne Evans, Published by Between the Lines, 2020
  3. Retired Except on Demand The Life of Dr Cicely Williams by Craddock, Sally, Published Green College, 1983
  4. Cicely: The Story of a Doctor by Ann Dally, Published Gollancz 1968

Books on civilians by historians

  1. Twists of Fate The ivilian ordeal in British Malaya 1941-1945 by Nigel Stanley, Topsham & Hitchin, 2020
  2. New perspectives on the Japanese occupation in Malaya and Singapore, 1941-1945 /edited by Akashi Yoji & Yoshimura Mako, 2008
  3. Australia’s Forgotten Prisoners: Civilians Interned by the Japanese in World War Two, by Christina Twomey, Published Cambridge University Press 2007
  4. The Internment of Western Civilians by the Japanese 1941-1945, DR Bernice Archer, published RoutledgeCurzon 2004 (sources including unpublished manuscripts)
  5. No Longer Silent, World-Wide Memories of the Children of World War II, published by Pictorial Histories Publication Co. 1995
  6. JOSEPH KENNEDY – British Civilians and the Japanese war in Malaya and Singapore, 1987
  7. Shenton of Singapore, Governor and Prisoner of War, Brain Montgomery, published Lee Cooper 1984
  8. Campaigning in Captivity: Salvationist ‘Ambassadors in Bonds’ during the Second World War (Salvation Army), By Arch Wiggins, published Salvationists Publishing London 1947. Chapter on Changi https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/PR-SA-X-00048/2
  9. Articles: Voices and Silences of Memory: Civilian Internees of the Japanese in British Asia during the Second World War by Felicia Yap https://www.jstor.org/stable/23265541, 2011 
  1. Bibliographies
  1.  On Singapore at war: Changi From Singapore to Syonan-to 1941-1945 :a select bibliography /[compilers & editors, V. Perumbulavil, Wong Heng
  2. On Civilians in Singapore at war: Identifying and collecting primary sources of information in the archives – Peng Han Lim

lists additional sources (taken from multiple sources including Dr Archer’s book)

  • Unpublished Diaries/ Manuscripts (partial list)
  • Oral Histories (partial list)
  • Camp Newspapers 
  • Maps. These actually are plans of Changi. He mentions these:
    • In Lewis’s book
    • In Thompson’s book
    • H. E. MacKenzie’s map in National Archives of Singapore (NAS) drawn with a draughtsman-like precision, showed the location of the football ground where the camp’s league matches and knock-out tournament were played. 

In addition there are

  • WFN Churchills unpublished manuscript has a superb pictorial map (Ref 15)
  • Changi Plan in Miller Papers Box 1
  • Changi Plan in manuscript with author (Ref 59)
  1. Biblio of Japanese works – New perspectives on the Japanese occupation in Malaya and Singapore, 1941-1945 /edited by Akashi Yoji & Yoshimura Mako, 2008 – Annotated Biblio by Akashi Yogi
  1. Camp Newspapers (see article by author on newspapers – ref 1 above)
  1. Karikal Chronicle & Changi Guardian – the most well-known newspapers of the men’s camp. Published Harry Miller and G.H.Wade. See Author’s article
  1. Changi Guardian/ Karikal digitized at Cambridge https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00029/1
  2. We Published in Prison  by Miller & Wade. They retyped the newspaper content into volumes with an introduction and in a later edition, cartoons, maps etc. See authors article (Ref 44), details of manuscript with author (Ref 59) and IWM (Annexure 1 Box 2)
  3. Millers co-publisher was Gus Harold Wade. He has been identified as Guy in some books: Archer p.105, Dateline Singapore :  150 years of The Straits Times by C.M.Turnbull, p.72. The author/ historian Jonathan Moffat provided me with a Red Cross card that not only confirmed he was Gus, but that there was a Guy Wade, but he was someone else (when Gus’s family was queried about him they confirmed this Guy Wade was not their Gus)
  1. When going through the Freddy Bloom papers at IWM (Ref 54), I found one edition of a camp newspaper, the Convent Times – a 1 page newspaper from Men’s Block D, editor W.A.Wilson. It’s dated July 3, 1943, issue 190 and there’s a Changi Guardian (CG) of the same day, issue 234. So one can see that The Convent was almost as prolific as CG. 

A back-story to this. When the civilians were interred on Feb 17, 1942, the largest men’s camp was at Karikal Mahal, where Miller and Wade started Karikal Chronicles. A few days later when there was a large influx of male internees, an convent was used to house them. Soon there was a rift between the 2 camps on sharing food and possessions. When the men moved to Changi on March 6, most men stayed in along with their original camp-mates, and the men from the Convent moved to Block D (REF 7). 

WA Wilson of the Singapore Free Press was one of the Convent men & he teamed up with Miller and Wade as a 3rd co-publisher for Karikal Chronicles. That partnership was short lived and lasted just 2 issues, No 8 and 9. Not only that, when Miller and Wade retyped the newspaper content in their manuscript We Published in Prison, they removed his name as a co-publisher for these 2 issues. It seems Wilson started his own paper, The Convent. 

  1. POW WOW weekly newspaper of the women’s camp edited by Freddy Bloom-(see Ref 54)
  2. The Liberator, 1st issue of monthly periodical Salvation Army in Changi https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/PR-SA-SMM-00001-00004-00002/1
  3. Michiko The civilian women’s internment camp in Singapore: the world of POW WOW in New perspectives on the Japanese occupation in Malaya and Singapore, 1941-1945 /edited by Akashi Yoji & Yoshimura Mako, 2008
  4. IWM

The earlier IWM XX/ YY/ ZZ refs have been replaced by a new set of catalogue references. There are numerous other refs to civilian internees and this focusses on Harry Miller/ Freddy Bloom, publishers of the camp newspapers

  1. Miller Private Papers (co-publisher of Karikal Chronicles & Changi Guardian, the newspapers published in the male camp at Changi, d1998). IWM 67/194/1-6 correspond to Catalogue Ref Documents.14623 Private Papers of H Miller OBE | Imperial War Museums (iwm.org.uk) See details in Annexure 1.
  2. Harry Miller Oral History 1972, Catalogue 2984 https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80002969
  3. Freddy Bloom Private Papers IWM 66/254/1 POW WOW  corresponds to Catalogue Ref Documents.14623 Private Papers of Mrs F Bloom OBE | Imperial War Museums (iwm.org.uk) 

Has all but 2 issues of POW WOW, the weekly newspaper for the women’s camp edited by Freddy Bloom (hand-written note saying missing editions 14 (7.4.43) and 26 (Sep 43), No 18 has 2 editorials

Census of adult women in camp – 25 Sep 1942

Program for POW WOW Circus Presented by Women”s Section 3 July 2603 (1943)

Governor’s proclamation with instruction from the Japanese, Feb 16. 

Christmas issue of Changi Guardian presented to Freddy by its editors

Appeal to Japanese commandant to improve conditions 1 March 2603 (1943) – 7 pages typewritten

Convent Times – 1 page newspaper from Men’s Block D, No 190, July 6, 1943, editor W.A.Wilson, with Japanese chop

Changi Guardian No 234 of same date. 

POW WOW 8 Apr 1942 – says 1 month ago came from Changi so March 8 (men moved Mar 6)

  1. Private Papers of Mrs K.M. de Mowbray, Catalogue DOCUMENTS 10756 https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/1030010773   A typed memoir c200 pages, each pages inserted in a paper sleeve & can be read by lifting the flap on top of the sleeve, bound in red buckram folder c15x10x2 inches  
  2. Thomas Kitching’s actual diary recently donated as mentioned by Stephen Walton, IWM at RFHG’s Liverpool conference Jun 2023 – not catalogued yet?

Related to Miller

  1. Miller Straits Times Interview when he visited Singapore 1993 https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/Digitised/Article/straitstimes19931114-1.2.50.2.2.1?ST=1&AT=search&K=harry+miller++london+straits+times&P=2&Display=0&filterS=0&QT=harry,miller,london,straits,times&oref=article
  2. Miller Orbituary 1998 https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/Digitised/Article/straitstimes19980106-1.2.38.6
  1. Additional material from manuscript We Published in Prison with author
  • Title Pages (We Published in Prison) with introduction
  • Detailed map of Changi with cell blocks etc & scale.
  • Sketch of courtyard “Hudson’s Bay” by D.J.Kibby August 1942 courtyard
  • 3 original cartoons, 1 coloured/ unsigned, 2 B&W signed Clark
  • Other differences from papers as originally published, eg WA Wilson not mentioned as publisher of Karikal 8/9 in the retype made in Changi 1942 just weeks/months after the Feb 42 originals, however he appears as a 3rd publisher in the original papers
  • Cambridge has pg2 of CG75 missing, present in my collection
  1. Online Cambridge archives – A sample of the great work here
  1. Introduction https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/collections/civilianinternment/1

Memoirs (a selection)

  1. Some reminiscences of Malaya by J.S.Potter

https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00003-00001/1

  1. Isabella Bain short memoir https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00009-00012/1
  2. Personal Recollections from Changi Guardian https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00007/1
  3. Governor Sir Shenton Thomas Report – Malaya’s War Effort https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00006/1
  4. Letters to Harry Miller on his Changi Manuscript https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00025/1

In Cambridge, on Camp Administration

  1. Internment Camp Administration – a Note made 1945 https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00011/1
  2. Internment Camp Administration – a post war note https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00004-00033-00028/1
  3. Quartermasters Records Normal Jarrett https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00013/1
  4. Archives – Memo’s from/ to Japanese authorities – maintained by John Weekeley https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00015/1
  5. Changi and Sime Road civilian internment camps: nominal rolls of internees https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00022/1
  6. Disciplinary Rules Sime Road https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00032/1
  7. Special announcement by the men’s and women’s representatives – Japanese leaving Changi on Aug 24, 1945https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00004-00033-00026/1
  8. Malayan Times publ by Military Administration 6 Sep 1945 https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00103-00012-00031/2
  9. British civilians interned by the Japanese in World War Two (RCMS 393)

Prepared by the Association of British Civilian Internees Far East Region https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-RCMS-00393/1

In Cambridge on Changi “University”

  1.  Cambridge Assessment Exams  https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-CA-A-WWII-00001-00003/1
  2. Question Papers https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-CA-A-WWII-00001-00005/1 
  3. post war correspondence https://cudl.lib.cam.ac.uk/view/MS-CA-A-WWII-00001-00006/1

E. Double Tenth

  1. Deadly Secrets by Lynette Ramsey Silver, published by Sally Milner Publishing 2010
  2. Article by author on Operation Jaywick – what led to the Double Tenth tortures. Article is based on a young boys comic book version of the raidhttps://biblioasia.nlb.gov.sg/vol-19/issue-2/jul-sep-2023/operation-jaywick-comic-book-victor/
  3. List of those tortured by Kempetai https://lynettesilver.com/investigations/rimau-historic-marker/

On the post war trial in Singapore

  1. Case Summary https://singaporewarcrimestrials.com/case-summaries/detail/013
  2. This contains links to International Criminal Courts website www.legal-tools.org with summary results. This website has mainly trial summaries (no transcripts or evidence) of 1000s of war crime trials.
  3. WO 235/891 at National Archives Kew has records on this trial https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/r/C4408298 I have not seen this file, but seen similar WO refs for other trials and they contain all the details – transcripts, evidence, judgements, appeals if any
  4. Double Tenth Trial War Crimes Court, edited by Bashir Mallal, published The Nalayan Law Journal Office Singapore 1947
  5. War Crimes Trial Vol VIII The “Double Tenth” Trial, Edited by Colin Sleeman and S.C. Silken, published William Hodge and Co Ltd, 1951 (IWM Catalogue LBY 27263
  6. https://www.cofepow.org.uk/armed-forces-stories-list/double-tenth-atrocity

Annexure 1 – HARRY MILLER PAPERS IN IWM

Earlier Ref IWM 67/194/1 to 6 now correspond to IWMs Catalogue Ref Documents.14623 Private Papers of H Miller OBE | Imperial War Museums (iwm.org.uk)

PLS NOTE: As there were 6 boxes with dozens of documents and perhaps over 2000 pages, I may have noted an item down as being in box X when may be in box Y – do forgive me. I do recommend that you see all the boxes for the incredible history in them.

Box 1

  1. Diary maintained in internment. Bound in light fawn coloured cloth with a black stitched border and the letters H, M monogramed on top. 64 pages, c8x5 inches. Illegible pencil short hand squiggles, fading and unless its digitized soon, will disappear. 
  1. Newspaper Handbook that was part of Changi/ Sime library. Covered in dark brown paper. Front inner cover has a piece of paper pasted with this message typed 

“This is a new book which, in 

our present circumstances is beyond price. Will you 

please treat it accordingly?

Thank you

C.E. Collinge

Men’s Representative”

This may have been pasted on every book in the library, though that would have been a lot of work.

On the right of this page – is a message hand written in ink

“Presented to Mr. H. Miller

By

Graham? Browne

Camp Librarian”

Changi & Sime Road Internment 

Camps, Singapore

August 25, 1945”

This must have been gifted after news of surrender had reached.

On the extreme right of this page is a list of those who have borrowed this book during internmen

  1. H. Millers Japanese ID
  2. POW WOW 15/8/42 – 2 pages
  3. Scrap Book – An incredible 199 page scrapbook of his internment. Must have been made after liberation as it’s beautifully produced with pre-war photographs, red ink on thick paper etc. Screaming for a facsimile edition to be published, with an introduction by yours truly!
  4. Series of newspapers Singapore Feb 12-15, 1942 with gung-ho headlines, followed by the Governor’s proclamation with instruction from the Japanese, Feb 16. 
  5. Newspaper article dated Jan 23, 1948 on the war
  6. Running Commentary of Removal from Changi to Sime Road As per Notes – 4 pages. No author specified
  7. Broadcast Talk by Harry Miller on Sep 5, 1945 – 1 page
  8. Handwritten letter addressed Dear Harry, signed Love Freddy. Probably post war
  9. Unsigned copy of Sep 12, 1945 Instrument of Surrender with a pink Press Pass for Harry Miller
  10. Changi Guardian No. 19, April 1, 1942 – 2 pages
  11. Changi Guardian No. 45, May 1, 1942 – 3 pages – this a draft of what was to be published as the corrections made here are all reflected in the final one published in the Cambridge archives
  12. Telex to Churchill by Collinge (Men’s Rep) saying they overjoyed ete and await opportunity to toast your continued health and happiness.
  13. Printed flyer from Allies “TO ALL ALLIED PRISONERS OF WAR” on instructions till help comes with Japanese translation on the verso
  14. Announcement by the Men’s Representative 20 Aug, 1945 on surrender
  15. Special Bulletin by Men’s Rep 22 Aug, 1945 on various issues  
  16. Special Announcement by Men’s and Women’s Reps (undated but probably b/w Aug 22 and 27…see preceding & following items) on interview with Japanese commander General Saito who updated them on surrender negotiations
  17. Announcement by Men’s Rep dt 27 Aug, 1945 
  18. Handwritten note on Selarang Japan’s Own Dachau in Singapore – 6 pages, not signed. This may not have been seen by those researching this incident as they may not have expected to find anything on it in a civilian internee’s papers.
  19. Typed version of the same with corrections in ink – 5 pages
  20. Straits Times Aug 12, 1946 – anniversary of day that rumpurs had spread Japan has accepted Potsdam declaration – 2 pages
  21. A typed page with information of 3 groups – Women Occupations split by various total 402 (hand written 14 nationalities), Men Non-Govt various splits total 1833 (handwritten 24 nationalities), Men Govt total 876 (handwritten 6 nationalities including Jews. NOTE this totals 3111 (not stated) and there is a pencil notation at bottom +/- 2000
  22. Hand-written transcript of Syonan Times article 15 Aug 1942 on Ford factory surrender negotiations with what Yamashita and Percival said – 5 pages. 6th page has transcript of Governors communique 6pm Feb 15, 1942 saying Percival has gone to Japan HQ with “certain proposal”
  23. 20 km per day Malayan war diary – 1 page hand-written with dates form Dec 8 to Feb 15, 1942
  24. Plan of Changi Jail
  25. 4 page memorandum to Japanese to improve conditions, Aug 25, 1942
  26. “Arm Band we had to wear every day until freed”
  27. Program ‘The Changidrome Presents  Excellities” March 23, 1942
  28. Watercolour sketch by “JRC” 13 March, 1943 of a hut on a beach under coconut trees 
  29. Red Cross Christmas Club Changi Internment Club 1942 printed note with seasons greetings, Harry (Miller) written in ink
  30. Account book, cloth cover with inscribed initials I, G, S
  31.  Note book, first page hand-written I.G. Salmond, “Piccadilly” – Hut 116 Bukit Timah, As from 24/5/44

2 sketches, 1 of Cell D III 17 in a plastic sleeve on which is written in black felt pen ALL ABOARD IWMN SPECIAL EXHIBITION…likely a wartime exhibition.

  1. Slim Japanese printed book with I.G. Salmond Hut 116 hand-written on top
  2. Rectangular notepad with plum boards – Harry Miller, hut 66
  3. Text of Imperial Rescript of Dec 8, 2601 (Syonan Times)
  4. Oath by Enemy Alien signed by Miller dt 12 Nov 2602 (1942)
  5. Punishments for breaking oath
  6. ARP Singapore – 6 page typewritten note
  7. Alexandra Hospital massacre – extract from war diary 17 Feb 1942 – 4 typewritten pages
  8. Report by I.G. Salmond, survivor of Kuala who arrived camp 7 April 1942 – 9 pages
  9. Extract from Mrs K. Stevens, 21 June 1942 – ship bombed
  10. Extract Syonan Times Oct 10, 1942 – Woman tells of experience of burning ship
  11. Shipwrecked Ipoh girl returns safely to parents by kindly Help of our Army (doesn’t say but probably extract from Syonan Times) – 2 pg
  12. Walter Shillito Vaughn Curtis – former clerk PWD – Double Tenth – 1pg
  13. Hugh Macintyre – ditto – 6 pgs
  14. William Thorpe Cherry – ditto – 1pg
  15. Rev Wilson, Bishop of Singapore – ditto – 3 pages (all these 4 1010 on yellowed paper)
  16. I.G. Salmond diary with initials embossed – Hut 56 Sime Road

Box 2 

Manuscript of We Published in Prison Changi 1942, Vol 1 (Karikal Chronicles1-13) – 2 sets

Manuscript of We Published in Prison KL 1949 issue Vol 1 contents page and Karikal Chronicles Issue 14, no other pages, Vol2 and 3 are complete, total 749 pages. 1 set ) 2. 

No Defence for Singapore – draft manuscript of a book

Kemeptai Kindness by Tan Thoon Lip, published Singapore, Malayan Law Journal 1946 – 16 days on imprisonment Nov, 1942

Box 3 

papers, manuscripts relating to his post war work on the Malayan Emergency – I left this box to last as it was less relevant to my research. However, I unable to get into it by the time the IWM Research Room shut at 4pm. For next time!

Box 4 

Draft Manuscript of memoir We Published in Prison – 3 sets of draft formats

Newspaper clippings of Harry Miller retiring, Sep 1980

Draft Article for London Sunday Times – Malaya’s War Ends But Another Danger Arises – has his London address at bottom, so written post retirement

black & white photographs of  Straits Times office in Selangor, his visit to Singapore 1993, of an office party

4 page article on the Australian nurses ”The Banka” from The Malayan Monthly Sep 1954

Box 5

Draft Manuscript of The Curious War in Malaya, The Emergency of 1948-60 and the dangers today

Changi Jail – an incredible sketch by a draughtsman as it looks like it’s printed as the exhibition note that follows seems to have been held during the war (see Box1). There are 2 identical sketches/ prints with 1 of them in black ink ALL ABOARD IWMN SPECIAL EXHIBITION. 

Box 6 – documents related to Double Tenth trial

Draft Manuscript for a book, Japanese Pall Over Singapore by H. Miller

Draft Manuscript for a book, Victim of the Kempetai by Harry Miller – typed with corrections – on Sir Robert Scott & Double Tenth interrogations – 262+ pages. Chapter Tortured Bodies has the  grisly details 

Obituary of Sir Robert Scott, 1982

Another draft of same book, with choice of 4 titles

Map of Operation Jaywick Singapore, 1 page out of a book, no title

Singapore in Hindsight by Sir Robert Scott, a 7 page typewritten article

Sham Fortress by Harry Miller 10 Years Assignment in Singapore – chapter outline – 5 pages typewritten

Edgar Jones: Psychological Resilience and Coping

Edgar Jones
Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience,
King’s College London

Today, prisoners-of-war are recognised a group of veterans particularly at risk of persisting or severe psychological illness. Recent studies of American and Israeli prisoners-of-war report elevated rates
(20% to 30%) of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Stressors include: 1. The act of surrender which may involve physical violence and the threat of death. 2. The experience of privation and brutality during imprisonment with elevated rates of illness and death. 3. Feelings of guilt, shame and anger at having been captured, and 4. Heightened challenges of reintegration into civilian society.


The high mortality experienced by Far Eastern prisoners of war would inevitably have led to elevated rates of psychological illness because of the enduring association between physical and psychological casualties. Generally held in captivity for over three years, prisoners who survived had several common features: a chance event with a positive outcome during captivity; an intense focus on survival; and skills or attributes from their pre-war life that given them an advantage; these
included a strong sense of family, professional, language or technical skills, faith, physical strength, earlier experiences of adversity.


Research suggests that there is no one method to cope, though adaptability, pre-captivity skills and a focus on survival seem common to many survivors. These qualities were needed no less for transition and reintegration into civilian life than they were for the challenges of captivity.


Recognition of the psychological trauma that Far Eastern prisoners of war experienced was slow and only gathered pace after the formal acceptance of PTSD in 1980. Arguably it is still being refined as
reflected by the recognition of complex PTSD in 2019 and on-going research into moral injury.

Gautam Hazarika: Far East Issues of POW Journal

“The Prisoner of War” was The Official Journal of the Prisoners of the War Department of the Red Cross and St John Ambulance, published at St. James Palace, London during the war.  This Journal aimed to inform family members (in the banner it says FREE TO NEXT OF KIN) & the general public about the condition of Prisoners of War & internees, and how best to send them letters and parcels. Initially it had one page on the Far East on occasion as there was no information available, or whatever was, was scraps and unverifiable. 6 of these pages are below (these are just from Jun/ Sep/Oct 1943 and there probably are more). 

The Far East Special Monthly editions started in February 1944, once enough information was available to warrant one. There were 12 issues in total and I’ve not found online records of a complete set anywhere. They are an incredible research resource and I was fortunate to find a complete set and am delighted to be able to share them with as many people as possible.

The first issue starts with an editorial describing efforts so far and continues with News From the Camps, Letters Home (sections that occur in all issues), Life in Stanley Camp Hong Kong, How to Address Your Letters.

The other issues were: 

  • No.2 March 44 (adds a section on Questions), 
  • No.3 April 44 (includes 2 pages on civilians, though reports from the camps also covers civilian camps), 
  • No. 4 Aug 44 (including an article on the Mysterious Japanese
  • No. 5 Jan 45 (including article on Siam-Burma Railway – by now Burma was being recoved and detailed news of this was filtering in, including account from survivors + Civilian news)
  • No. 6 March 45, includes a note on the Japanese date system, an article on how cables are sent and bottlenecks, survivor from Siam (F.Wilson, Sherwood Forresters), Christmas in Wampo Camp Siam, conditions in Java camps, Rescued in the Philippines, Civilian news, a wonderful sketch map of Stanley Camp Hong Kong)
  • No. 7 May 45 – there is no ref to VE Day, so may have been published before May 8, 1945. Includes articles – Home from the Philippines, How the mail goes, Conditions in Hong Kong, a page on HK with pictures,  civilian news, Japanese politics, 
  • No. 8, Jun 45 – war in Asia seemed to have a long hard slog ahead as Japan was expected to oppose the expected Allied invasion. Article on Lifting the Curtain in Japan, Burma Freedom at Last, Civilian News, Internment in Malaya, Last Days at Santo Tomas, Volunteer Forces Liberated
  • No. 9 Aug 45: was likely published between August 12 when news first came out of Japan accepting the Potsdam Declaration, and August 15 when surrender was announced. Includes A Word to Relatives, cartoons of Siam Camps, Conditions in Shamshuipo, Rangoon Christmas an article by Cap J.H. Bunten, Cameronians, Planning their Food, pictures of life in Taiwan camps, report by Red Cross delegates visiting camps, lots of Civilian news, article Last days in Rangoon Jail
  • No. 10 Sep 45 – Repatriation News, every day meals and recipes for Repatriates, Red Cross Reports, full page map of Far East Camps, Three Years in Rangoon Gaol by H. Born, article on When He Arrives
  • No. 11 Nov 45 – Repatriation news, message from The King, civilian news, Liverpool welcome, Free At Last by Major F.E. Grazdoke, R.E. (Article on Taiwan) Red Cross article, Bridging the Gap (article on gap b/w prisoner life & civilian life, ie on being home as a civilian, not POW vs civilian internee),  more recipes, 
  • No. 12 Dec 45 – FINAL ISSUE printed, Welcome in the West (travel back via US/ Canada), In Middle East India and Beyond, Red Cross, Sketch map of Burma railway camps, Far Eastern Broadcasts (forced on POWs), Far East Section at work, letter from Mountbatten.

All the 12 issues total 135 pages and are an incredible research resource
An old book with black text

Description automatically generatedAn old newspaper with black text

Description automatically generatedA newspaper with a red tag

Description automatically generatedAn old book with text

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Stephen Walton: IWM Update

Stephen Walton, Senior Curator IWM

Since the previous RFHG Liverpool conference the Imperial War Museums (as the various IWM sites are now collectively called) were, along with the rest of the country, severely impacted by the Covid
pandemic and national lockdown. Our sites were closed to the public (and to most staff) for severalmonths, and our survival was due in large part to emergency funding from government. It has taken the IWM a long time to recover fully from this disaster, thankfully we are now essentially back to where we were before March 2020. Our on-line offer in some ways benefitted from lockdown, in that it forced us to put much more on our website to engage our audiences than would otherwise
have been the case. A highly popular series of YouTube videos on a variety of historical subjects (including the dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan in 1945 and the fall of Singapore in 1942) is just one of these innovations.


Less fortunately, our public on-site research offer has lagged behind this general recovery. The Research Room at IWM London was one of the last areas of the museum’s operations to open up again, and it has been functioning on a very restricted basis. A three day per week opening, and
strict limits on desk occupancy and number of archived collection items that can be viewed or consulted on any one day, have inevitably resulted in high levels of frustration in the wider research community. This has been due mainly to the prioritisation of those aspects of IWM’s activities that bring in the most revenue to replenish the coffers post-Covid – which public access to our collections in the Research Room does not. On a happier note, from August this year onwards, the Research
Room will be increasing its opening hours, desk numbers and daily collection items once again. In the longer term, there are ambitious plans to create a much larger public research facility which will open up our collections even more, and fundraising for this has already begun.


We are continuing to add to our large and varied FEPOW collections, mainly through donations of material from members of the public. Due to pressures on storage and associated resources, and collecting priorities in other areas, this is at a much lower rate than in previous years. There is also still much work to be done on uncatalogued FEPOW material that we have not had the time to deal with fully. Backlogs of this nature are common to most museums, the approach being that it is important to secure valuable historical material whilst it is still there, even if it cannot be immediately documented to the desired standard.

Lastly, if there are any lines of enquiry with your own FEPOW research that you think IWM might be able to assist with, do feel free to contact me (swalton@iwm.org.uk) and I will do my best to help.

Gautam Hazarika: Researching Indian FEPOWs

This story was unknown to me 8 months ago & I’ve been on it full time only for 2 months, hence it’s an early attempt. It’s select, as the Australian records are too vast to list entirely. The 5 books here seem to be the only ones on Indian FEPOWs & the rest of the biblio are primary records and a handful of articles I found useful to introduce me to the topic.

Some highlights:

  • Sergeant Crasta called New Britain “Torture island” and in his little-known memoir Eaten by the Japanese he describes so much so well. From the title I knew he had not chosen it – in fact his son had. Somehow POWs seem to have less bitterness than one would expect.
  • Lt Pillai’s escape, his MC in 5 days after reaching Delhi and his 32- page report gave India HQ the first news of the POWs, internees & civilian morale – a thrilling read.
  • Major Dhillon, after a 6-month verification of his debrief of double crossing the Japanese, was awarded the MBE. Though nothing happened, had he planned a Triple Cross all long?
  • Lt BP Singh’s MBE recommendation highlights him being the only Indian with the British in Changi. He had been captured in Arakan 1943 & to prevent him “infecting” the other Indians with his spirit, sent to Changi. 
  • In his memoir, Lt Col Gurbaksh Singh recounts how he learns much later of his DSO, as it was awarded just before surrender. When Bose tries to recruit him into the INA he says, “if I could betray one master, I could betray another”. CinC India recommends a CBE for his POW days, he gets “just” an OBE.
  • The interrogation of Maj Kogi Kazuo when he justifies the beheading of Captain Ansari, George Cross, based on the Japanese military code that he produces.
  • Jemadar Chint Singh joined the INA & then left it to spend 30 months in New Guinea. At liberation, he was 1 of 13 survivors out of 2500 (fortunately 191 more had been rescued earlier), provided evidence for many trials & returned to give evidence vs Lt Gen Adachi.
  • The Last Word: The illiterate Cook Shaikh Madar’s thumbprint on his testimony to ensure his voice is heard, and it is.

Chap 1: In WWII in the Far East, the Indian Army served in all the campaigns – Burma, Malaya/ Singapore, Hong Kong and Borneo, extensively covered by historians and British/ Australian participants. These are rare accounts by Indians participants (3 of these are in the highlights but I’ve given different details here):

  1. Three Thousand Miles to Freedom by Brig MM Pillai, MC, Lancer Publications 2009. Lt Pillai was in the Bombay Sappers and was in KROH COL at the start, Slim River, & later escaped in May 1942.
  2. Escape from Singapore by Brig Jasbir Singh SM (his son), Lancer Publications 2010. Captain Balbir Singh of 4/19 Hyderabad Regiment – sent to reinforce Kotah Bahru & then the retreat down the Malay peninsula and escaped in May 1942. 
  3. Indelible Reminiscences, Lancer Publications 2013, published by his wife after his death. Lt Col Gurbaksh Singh Commanding Jind State Forces – guarding Tengah & Kallang airfields in Singapore, June 1942 sent to construct Kluang airfield in Johore, Malaya (3,000 men) where they remained for rest of the war.
  4. Eaten by The Japanese, by John Baptist Crasta, published by Invisible Man Books 1998. Sergeant Crasta, RIASC wasn’t in the front line but witnessed the chaos in Singapore on Dec 8, 1941, in KL later & back again in Singapore. Describes post surrender Singapore, “Torture ship” journey to New Britain, his horrific time there, terrors of Allied air raids starting Oct 12, 1943, liberation & repatriation – a vivid account of his time in captivity and possibly the only complete manuscript published as is. 

Besides these memoirs, some of which cover the campaign, there are many well-known histories such as Singapore Burning by Colin Smith etc. that give an idea of what their unit was doing/ facing during the campaign.

Ch2: Singapore in 1942 

Was rife with the launch of the Japanese sponsored Indian National Army (INA) to expel Britain from India, propaganda & torture to make Indians join & some dramatic escapes. 

(Indian POW Annexure 1 is a short historical note on this).

Start with Feb 17, 1942, surrender ceremony in Farrer Park where the Indians were “handed over” to Japan by Lt Col Hunt (5). This created great controversy post war when senior INA officers were tried for treason – the handover was taken by Nehru & the defense team as absolving Indians from their allegiance (6). Hear from those who did not join the INA see 1-4, 8-14 

Feb 1942: Settling down into various camps across Singapore. See 8, 11

March 1942: the first shipments of troops for labour:

  • March 21, units of HKSAR (HK and Singapore Artillery) shipped to Philippines (see 7)
  • Gurbaksh Singh told in March to leave for Borneo, that gets delayed & he with 3,000 men go instead to Johore in June (3 pg96). 
  • Balbir Singh almost marching off for Andaman’s when its cancelled (2, pg67).
  • Pillai says 9,000 troops shipped out by April to Andamans, Hanoi & Thailand. He says HKSAR sent to Andamans, though it went to Phils. However as seen in Balbir & Gurbaksh Singh’s cases, things change. Am verifying other details (11, App A).

May 4 Escape by Cap Balbir & Gangaram Parab of 4/19 Hyderabad and Cap Pritam Singh 5/6 Punjab. Balbir & Parab reach early Oct 1942. Pritam Singh reaches end October helped by Dhillon (see Double Cross below). See 8,9,10.

May 7 Escape by Lts Pillai & Radhakrishnan (a Volunteer who had not been interned) and Cap Natarjan, IMS. Though they leave 3 days later, they arrive 2 months earlier on Aug 2. While in hospital, Gandhi, Nehru & entire Congress leadership is arrested, India is in chaos & they are suspects. 5 days after reaching Delhi on Aug 26, CinC recommends MC. See 11, 12

May onwards

  • INA propaganda (see 1-4, 8-15) and in August, tortures (see 16, 17)
  • Syonan Times (English language paper in Singapore to replace Straits Times) reports on India (see 22)
  • September 1942 about 20k POWs join INA, wearing badges (see 17)
  • Late October 1942 Double Cross by Major Dhillon, RIASC and 2nd Lt Bakhtawar, Bengal sappers. See 13,14, 15. Nothing happened later, but was it a planned triple cross?
  • 29th December 1942 – 1st INA disbanded by its commander, Cap Mohan Singh, 1/14th Punjab (see 18-21)
  • Early 1943 attempts to get recruits back again, see 17.

References (AWM/ some WO at National Archives online, IOR or India Office Records at British Library are not)

  1. Hunt: In most books he’s ref to as Lt Col Hunt Malaya Command or HQ. He is in fact Lt William Shapter Hunt, Commander of the 2nd Echelon of Hodsons Horse, Indian Armored Corps (courtesy Jonathan Moffat)
  1. INA Trial IOR-L/WS/1/1579
  2. HKSAR sent to Philippines on March 21 (post-war debriefs AWM54 1010/4/164 pgs 73-5, 88-93 etc) 
  3. CSDIC (Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre – it worked with MI9 to debrief escaped POWs) report on Cap Balbir debrief & MC recommendation WO-373-62-600
  4. CSDIC report on Cap Parab debrief & MC recommendation WO-373-62-601
  5. CSDIC report on Cap Pritam Singh debrief & MC recommendation WO-373-62-662
  6. Lt Pillai’s 32-page report AWM 54-779-10-4 deserves special mention. He brings the 1st news of conditions in Singapore, Malaya, Thailand & Burma to India HQ. Besides his escape, the debrief covers:
  • Changi civilians, Australians at Seletar, Indians at Bidadari, Nee Soon, Tengah, Tyersall, Buller
  • Shipment of 9k Indian POWs for labour 
  • Other escapes
  • Assessment of chance of escape for British/Aus (nil), Indians, good
  • Suggestions on propaganda in Southeast Asia & India
  • Names of those who helped them. 
  • Attitude of locals before, during the war & after surrender, assessment of loyalty
  1. India HQ Report on Pillai / Radhakrishnan debrief & MC recommendation WO-373-61-980. Gazetted 29 Sep 1942. Note Natarajan stayed behind in Burma.
  2. MBE recommendation for Major Dhillon WO-373-62-605
  3. Major Dhillons own account IOR-L/WS/1/1576
  4. CSDIC report on Lt Bakhtawar debrief & MBE recommendation WO-373-62-598.
  5. Major James report AWM 54 1010-4-152 (p3-5 of pdf)
  6. Jemader Chint Singh affidavit AWM 54 1010-3-108 (pg 25-6 of pdf)
  7. Report on Cap Mohan Singh WO-325-51
  8. Major Fujiwara Interrogation WO-203-6314
  9. CSDIC INA History IOR-L/WS/2/45
  10. INA History by Historical Section IOR-L/WS/2/46
  11. Syonan Times various articles if you search on The Syonan Shimbun or Syonan Shimbun Fornightly with relevant date range and key words eg Maru (for ship), Indian etc https://eresources.nlb.gov.sg/newspapers/advanced

Sarawak/Borneo (only 1 battalion 2/15 Punjab). 

Well documented example of how units get split up and shipped from place to place. 2/15 Punjab Reg surrendered in Sarawak Apr 3 1942. 700 sent to Java, then Singapore, where some remained, some sent back to Java, some remaining in Singapore & some came to New Britain. 

  1. Havildar Major Maula Baksh detailed account (AWM 54 1010/4/164, pg9),
  2. From this group, Captain Sher Dil Khan, MBE for fortitude in captivity in New Britain WO 373-87-347 
  3. Looking for some evidence from him, found an affidavit verified by him AWM 54 1010/4/170 PG 77
  4. For those who stayed behind in Borneo, battalion gets 2nd wartime MBE, Subedar Mhd Hasham at Kuching WO 373-87-344
  5. Sekhon’s account of Kuching/Sarawak crimes See AWM 54 1010/4/130 pg 11-12
  6. Sekhons Questionnaire – beatings to make them join INA in Miri/ Lutong – NAA Series No MP742/1 Control Symbol 336/1/2018 (courtesy Moffat)
  7. LABUAN crimes Sepoy Chuni Ram AWM 54 1010/4/120 p80-85
  8. Trial held in Singapore for crimes at Lutong Jun 1945 during Allied invasion. https://singaporewarcrimestrials.com/case-summaries/detail/092

My coverage of Hong Kong has been brief so far: 

Captain Ansari, nephew of Nizam of Hyderabad, was singled out due to his royal blood. He was beheaded 20 Oct 1943. George Cross gazetted 18 April 1946

  1. WO 325/ 167 has details of the trial Japan held when he was sentenced.
  2. His CWGC grave https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/2815107/mateen-ahmed-ansari/
  3. Write-up on him – https://vcgca.org/our-people/profile/155/MATEEN-AHMED-ANSARI

HK Escape narratives

  1. Multiple escape narratives and award recommendations WO-373-64-702
  2. Sepoy Manga Khan escaped 1942, caught & escaped 1944 leading 3 others. WO-373-47-418
  3. Jemadar Sher Singh escape narrative WO 373-64-65
  4. Akbar Ali + 4 escape narrative WO 373-64-66
  5. Numerous other awards in GAZETTE 18 Apr 46 
  1. Hong Kong Indian Camp Argyle Street WO 361/2048 

Burma references are limited:

See 33. From Burma in April 1942, Jemadar Padam Bahadur Thapa and Subedar Tekbahadur Limbu started an escape together, then split up. Thapa’s team splits further & he finally reaches India with 4 soldiers. The other part of his team is headed by Sepoy Ganga Bahadur Khettri who has 2 soldiers with him & also reach India. All are awarded. Meanwhile Limbu also reaches India with his team & gets the MC. 

34. Escape by Sub Tekbahadur Limbu in 1943, awarded MC, WO 373-62-499

34. Trial vs COL SUGASAWA summary Burma Railway

https://singaporewarcrimestrials.com/case-summaries/detail/095

35. Trial transcripts

https://recordsearch.naa.gov.au/SearchNRetrieve/Interface/ViewImage.aspx?B=30297583

The Japanese start shipping Indian POWs to New Britain/ Guinea in Dec 1942. 

Good Articles to get the big picture:

36. Prof Stanley https://www.awm.gov.au/articles/journal/j37/indians

  1. Maj-General Hamid   https://tribune.com.pk/story/2402061/could-inferno-be-worse?fbclid=IwAR2T-mpKMwDY_041sEXwr3VoU2T2qZDnu_hMsDMA2IpjqmJLI_eIIFcj2qw

Hell-Ship Journeys

  1. Pulau Trial Case Summary 

https://singaporewarcrimestrials.com/case-summaries/detail/001

  1. Went in Thames Maru to Pulau, (also carried 1500 Malay Chinese Javanese labourers? Trial says 2k Indian http://www.combinedfleet.com/Thames_t.htm
  2. Sinking of Buyo Maru Jan 27, 1943 by a US sub USS Wahoo with 194/500 people dying. See 45 (Sen)
  3. USS Wahoo patrol reports US National Archives NAID 74859023, and NAID 278490254
  4. http://combinedfleet.com/googlesearch.php?cx=004186240537787039759%3Abhyjuw5taag&channel=2324678199&cof=FORID%3A10&ie=UTF-8&q=BUYO&sa=Search
  5. Photo from US Naval History and Heritage Command – view from periscope of USS Wahoo of Buyo Maru sinking- public domain
A picture containing transport, watercraft, naval architecture, outdoor

Description automatically generated

https://www.history.navy.mil/content/history/nhhc/our-collections/photography/numerical-list-of-images/nara-series/80-g/80-G-30000/80-G-39746.html

  1. Hibi Maru (AWM 54 1010/4/170 Pg 91-2 CAP AMS CHARMARETTE 1HYD http://www.combinedfleet.com/Hibi_t.htm
  2. Other journey description, see 4.
  3. Singapore Keppel Harbour conditions Op Jaywick Debrief NAA – Item ID 235230

On their experience once they reached

They were liberated by Australia and AWM contains archives of their evidence. After giving them time to recuperate, they made each answer a questionnaire on their time in captivity (this is the document to be used to verify IWPs, hell ship dates). if war crimes were mentioned, then a separate statement needed to be made. 

Navigating AWM54 – World War II

AWM54 779 on POWs and Internees

AWM54 1010 on War Crimes Trials

As few Indian POWs are mentioned by name, best way is to search Indian POW 

From vast archives, these documents are good examples of the 100s of questionnaires & specific statements. The highlighted pages are by officers who provide a big picture narrative of their captivity  (also see 16 and 17 for big picture):

  1. AWM54 1010/4/164

Major Rasheed, Bahawalpur State Forces, AWM 54 1010/4/164, pg 24-32

Jemadar Diwan Singh of 1st Heavy Anti-Aircraft Regt AWM 54 1010/4/164 p94-7

  1. AWM54 1010/4/170

Captain Sen 5/2 Punjab Rifles AWM 54 1010/4/170 p47-53 (sunk by sub)

Lt Dr Saksena AWM 54 1010/4/170 pg 59-62 

Lt Col Syed Mohd Ishaq Hyderabad State Forces, AWM 54 1010/4/170, p63, p65-9

LT A.K.DAW Med Officer for SEN AWM 170 pg 156-7 

  1. AWM54 1010/3/109
  2. AWM54 1010/4/179
  3. AWM54 1010/4/130
  4. AWM54 1010/4/152
  5. AWM 54 779/3/102
  6. AWM54 1010/9/94 (cannibalism)

In 1944, Allies landed on New Guinea/ Bougainville in 1944 and this prompts escapes eg:

  • Cap JH Patel in New Guinea with 27 others
  • Gopal Prasad Jha, Bougainville, Aug 1944
  • Cap Pillay, Bougainville in Sep 1944. 
  1. WO 373-64-76: 

Meanwhile in Singapore 

  1. Captain DURRANI Bahawalpur State Forces, George Cross
  1. Rifleman Mehraj Din, Rajputana Rifles, escaped from Singapore to KL and set up a tailor shop. He supplied Indian POWs secretly & remaining undetected for the rest of the war. Awarded BEM. WO 373-104-170. 
  2. There were many others who blended into Singapore and Malaya after escape (interview with Lt Pillai’s son, Admiral Pillai)
  3. Captains Sudame & Jayaram, RIASC escaped from Singapore separately, and caught in Bangkok, brought back. Both awarded MBE WO 373-104-56 and WO 373-104-54
  4. Lt Ismail oral history IWM who had remained here. Marvellous tape. 3RD tape, Min 14:00 onwards on Malaya https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/80011491
  5. Lt BP Singh, captured at Arakan campaign, staunch anti-Japan, so segregated & the only Indian in Changi with British POWs. Set up radio & found his way out of Changi to pass war news regularly into Indian POW camp to keep their spirits up. WO 373-104-140 and his Changi record WO 367/1
  1. How doctors are managing https://fepowhistory.com/tag/indian-pows/

After liberation

How Many were shipped? 13-14k men shipped from Singapore, 550 to Pulau, 2.5k to New Guinea, 10-11k to New Britain.

How Many Survived? Pulau, 337/550, New Guinea 204/2.5k, not sure about New Britain (Crasta says out of 11k, 5.3k survivors including 1k hospital cases)

Indian POW Annexure Note has details of how this is calculated.

After rest & once questionnaires answered & specific statements made on war crimes, courts of inquiry were held. 

  1. AWM54 1010/4/170 has examples on pg 42-6, and 70-74

Subsequently 100 war crimes trials were held by Australia solely on atrocities against Indian POWs. In 66 of these all or some of the accused were convicted to death or prison. 

Inidan POW Annexure has a note on Legal aspects/ defense by Japanese . 

A good starting point are these articles:

  1. Sissons, D.C.S. The Australian War Crimes Trials and Investigations (1942-51). 
  1. Article on Australian War Crimes Trials with focus on Rabaul  

https://academic.oup.com/book/26719/chapter/195551727

  1. TOKYO WAR CRIMES TRIALS – MARK FELTON YOUTUBE

Trials archives:

  1. AWM226 items 15, 16, 17 
  2. AWM54 1010
  3. Singapore war crimes trial portal with summary https://singaporewarcrimestrials.com
  4. It has Links to details in UNs ICWC, search by name of defendant. This has records of all trials across countries, but mainly summaries & judgements, not the transcripts and evidence  https://www.legal-tools.org/

Some representative examples of trials

  1. Beheading of Cap Nirpal Singh without Trial AWM54 1010/6/100
  2. Trial of Captain Taura (said to be the cruelest unit commander on New Britain) AWM54 1010/3/81
  3. Based on Taura’s conviction, his C/o Col Negishi was tried as well but found not guilty AWM54 1010/6/4
  4. Lt Gen Adachi – convicted & committed suicide while serving his sentence AWM54 1010/3/8
  5. Trial of Gozawa Odaichi & others for atrocities on Hell Ship & on Palua island WO235/813. 

Chint Singh was prolific. He gave vast amounts of testimony, used in at least 6 trials and was 1 of the few who was brought back to give evidence in court such as at the trail of Lt-Gen Adachi.

  1. Chint Singh The Man Who Should Have Died by his son Narender Singh Parmar was published in 2021 
  2. His 61 page record of New Guinea and liberation- A brief sketch of the fate of 3000 Indian POWs in New Guinea. 1943-1945.  Pacific Manuscript Bureau. 

https://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/pambu/catalogue/index.php/396y-mwfd-fm7w

  1. Multiple affidavits as evidence in AWM 54 1010/9/79
  2. And AWM 54 1010/4/31
  3. Chint Singhs handwritten letter thanking 6th Australian division AWM 54-779-1-20

The Other Side of the Hill

A good place to find this in the trial transcripts. In addition, see

  1. AWM 54 1010/9/22 Affidavits by Japanese at Rabual, New Britain
  2. AWM 54 1010/9/23 Roll of Japanese units at Rabaul, statement by Gen adachi
  3. Unpublished manuscript by Japanese commander at Rabaul General Imamura AWM MSS1098
  4. Oral History of a Japanese now POW Iwao Muranaka in Changi post war

In Japanese  with a transcript – a pilot with Navy Air For& comes to Singapore, they were ready to fight off invasion, as POW, labour works in Singapore,  says British guards cried when they left for Japan.

Awards for Indian FEPOWs

2 George Crosses, at least 6 OBEs, over 30 MBEs, numerous MCs, MMs, BEMs, Mentions were awarded to Indian FEPOWs. Following gazette’s include multiple awards:

  1. April 18, 1946: Ansari GC, 6 OBEs, many MBEs
  1. May 9, 1946: 15 MBEs https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/37558/data.pdf
  2. Sep 25, 1947: over 20 MBEs, 14 BEMs, Mentions etc 

POWs return home:

  • Crasta (4) names his repatriation ship and many others. 
  • Dr Stanley suggested looking at NAA & National Library of Australia’s Trove database of newspaper articles many of which cover repatriation of POWs

https://trove.nla.gov.au/search/category/newspapers?keyword=

  • Chint Singhs book (72) gives an account of his return to New Guinea in 1970 to commemorate 25 years of the end of war.
  • Cap Balbir Singh (2) who retired as a Brigadier retraced his escape route in 1988
  • Their post-war feelings/ impact – we don’t know as none of the 5 memoirs cover this. This is the gap I’m trying to bridge through interviews. Have spoken to sons of 2 POWs and working on more.

You have to read my (hopeful) book to know the story properly & find out what the POWs felt and how it impacted the Family. I’m very new to this and welcome any guidance/ help.

Thanks, Gautam Hazarika, ghazarika70@yahoo.com

Annexure 1 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND INDIAN ARMY & INDIAN NATIONAL ARMY

When looking into the Indian Army, one comes across terms like KCO/ KCIO/ VCO/ ICO/ ECO. 

  • VCO: till the early 1920s, all officers were British. The senior most rank for Indians was Viceroy Commissioned Officers, senior to warrant officers but below commissioned officers.
  • KCO/KCIO: early 1920s, Indians commissioned from Sandhurst (Kings or Kings Indian CO)
  • ICO: when graduation training shifted from Sandhurst to India, they were called Indian CO.
  • ECO were Emergency CO when WWII started.

There were very few Indian officers in Singapore – I’ve come across mainly Lieutenant’s, some Captains, very few Majors and only 2 Lt Cols. 

Besides the Indian Army, there were also units belonging to the princely states, called Indian State Forces. 

  • There were 5 such units in Singapore – Hyderabad State Forces (different from Hyderabad Regiment which was Indian Army), Mysore, Bahawalpur, Jind, Kapurthala. 
  • Many of the people mentioned here, like Waheed (Annexure2), Rasheed (45), Ishaq (46), Gurbaksh (4) served there.

INDIAN NATIONAL ARMY

In creating their Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere and “Asia for the Asians”, before the war began, Japan Army HQ reached out to the local political groups in Southeast Asia. This unit was headed by Major Fujiwara and was known as Fujiwara Kikan. They found that there were Indians everywhere and each colony (and Siam) had an Indian Independence League (IIL), a political organization meant to galvanize the local population to support Indian independence in any practical way. Fujiwara went to Bangkok as Siam/Thailand was the only independent country (all the rest were British/French/ Dutch colonies) and met Giani Pritam Singh, the Head of IIL Thailand. The Giani decided to join hands with Fujiwara to expel Britain from India and the 2 headed to Malaya when the invasion began and around Dec 10, 1941, met one of the captured Indian officers Captain Mohan Singh, 1/14 Punjab. He too decided to work with the Japanese and formed the kernel of what was to become the Indian National Army (INA).

Annexure 2 How Many went to New Britain/ New Guinea? How Many survived?

New Guinea: 

Chint Singh wrote a 61 page narrative on New Guinea with a lot of detail (73). His heading is 3000 people. However, on pg 33 & 34, he finds that:

IWP 16 has 1 survivor out of 560 (a more reliable source, Jemader Nand Singh says 547) 

IWP 17 has 0 survivors out of 500

IWP 18 has 2 survivors out of 565

IWP 26 has 2 survivors out of 309

IWP 19 (his own) has 8 survivors out of 539 

Total 13 survivors out of 1,979 men.

There are no figures for IWP 17 (also in NG) and using the average of all the groups c 525, taking total in New Guinea of 2,500.

Later he finds that 191 men had been rescued before the war ended. So a total of 191 + 13 = 204 survive.

Sadly, 2 of the 13 survivors die on Sep 20, leaving 11. Chint Singh stays back to give more evidence and the remaining 10 fly back to India. They all die when the plane crashes. He remains the sole survivor of the 13 liberated after the war ended.

For when they sailed to NG, see below.

New Britain (NB):

When the Japanese start shipping Indian POWs in Dec 1942, they were organized into 26 Indian Worker Parties (IWP) of 500-600 men each, headed by an Indian officer. They normally sailed in a convoy of 2-2.2k men. Based on this, and the different pieces of archive information, the voyages and number of men are:

Voyage 1: One group sailing in December 1942 to New Britain (NB) – there are 2 refs to this. The stated Commander was in NB. This may have been a sole group as it was the start. So 500 went to NB.

Voyage2: On Jan 5, 2000 men sail to NB – 4 groups

Leave Jan 5, 1943, Buyo Maru with Sen’s 500 gets torpedoed and 1500 are on tanker Pacific Maru. Reaches Feb 19. All in AWM.

Voyage 3: On Jan 12, evidence of 1 group (James) sailing for NB. There are refs to this voyage in AWM. Likely to be 4-5 groups totaling 2-2.5k men.

Voyage 4: On May 1, several groups sail to NB (many refs in AWM), likely 4-5 groups of 2-2.5k men. Reach Jun 28.

Till now, we have 13-15 groups shipped.

Voyage 5: On May 5, 4 groups of 2.2k men sail to New Guinea (IWP 16-19). Reached May 16. Detailed a/c by Chint Singh in AWM.

Voyage 6: On May 5, 2000 men set sail in Thames Maru, 520 get dropped off at Pulau on Jun 8 (IWP 15) and the rest go to NB (IWP 20 + likely IWP 21 & 22). Reach July5. Complete details in AWM.

Voyage 7: 

  • ICWC archives say 30 men dropped off later at Pulau after Voyage 6, so there must have been another voyage.
  • Other hints from archives – IWP 26 arrives in NG in Jun 43. In Voyages 5/6 we have identified IWP 16-20 from archives, so there was likely Voyage 7 that included as usual c4 groups of c2k men. 
  • Hence likely this voyage had IWP 26 with 309 men to NG, IWP 23-5 of 1.5k men to NB and on the way dropped off 30 men at Pulau. 
  • This ties up a loose end as we had not accounted for IWP 23-5 yet. The total to NB would also tally with the 11k figure mentioned by Crasta. This last point may be a stretch and aI wouldn’t have done it had we not had the other evidence.

From this we have 13-14k men shipped from Singapore of whom 550 went to Pulau, 2.5k to New Guinea, 10-11k to New Britain.

How Many Survived? Pulau, 337/550, New Guinea 204/2.5k, not sure about New Britain (Crasta says 5.3k survivors including 1k hospital cases)

Annexure 3 War Crimes Trials

Tokyo trials was for high-ranking ones like PM Tojo. Besides this US, Australia, UK, China, Holland, Phils conducted over 2000 trials, on atrocities in territories controlled by them.  

Courts of inquiry were held as preliminary investigations – were the allegations specific, were witnesses alive, were the accused identified & alive? If so they were interrogated and eventually 100 war crimes trials were held to prosecute the Japanese. A basic tenet of English law is being able to cross-examine a witness. However it was realized that if this was to be followed, then many Japanese could not be tried as their accusers had either died after giving testimony or would have gone home, so a special act was passed that allowed written evidence to be admitted. For some trials, the accusers were brought back from India, as Chint Singh was. 

From the trial records one can see that the Japanese defence was well organized. Japanese officers with legal training formed the defence. The accused seemed well trained on how to answer questions – be brief and to the point. Instead of flatly denying accusations such as having beaten POWs, they would admit having pushed them on the shoulder. Senior officers came to provide evidence in court in support of their juniors. In many cases, defense was by Allied officers & they gave it their best.

The official Japanese view was that the Indians were not POWs but sub-soldiers as they had joined the INA (most of those in PNG had not) and were under Japanese military law where any command must be obeyed, and no one is to complain (the reason they gave for senior Japanese officers not knowing conditions were bad). Besides the conditions for the Japanese was as bad. Many POWs were beheaded, shot or bayoneted to death without trial. The Japanese commander General Imamura took responsibility for it all & offered to stand trial for all cases if his men were released. That offer was not taken. Eventually, 100 trials were held and in 66 of them, all or some of the Japanese were found guilty and sentenced to death or a jail sentence ranging from life down to 2 years.