The Real Tenko: Extraordinary True Stories of Women Prisoners of the Japanese

The Real Tenko: Extraordinary True Stories of Women Prisoners of the Japanese

by Mark Felton
The Real Tenko: Extraordinary True Stories of Women Prisoners of the Japanese

The Real Tenko: Extraordinary True Stories of Women Prisoners of the Japanese

by Mark Felton

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Overview

This book details the treatment of Allied service-women, female civilians and local women by the Japanese occupation forces. While a number of memoirs have been published there is no dedicated volume. It chronicles the massacres of nurses (such as that at Alexandra Hospital, Singapore), disturbing atrocities on both European and Asians, and accounts of imprisonment.

It reveals how many ended up in Japanese hands when they should have been evacuated. Also covered are the hardships of long marches and the sexual enslavement of white and native women (so called 'Comfort Women').

The book is a testimony both to the callous and cruel behavior of the Japanese and to the courage and fortitude of those who suffered at their hands.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781848845503
Publisher: Pen and Sword
Publication date: 12/01/2011
Pages: 176
Sales rank: 628,091
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Born in Colchester in 1974, Dr Mark Felton is the author of numerous World War II related titles with emphasis on Japan and the Japanese involvement during the war. He currently lives in China where he teaches at Fudan University.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Black Christmas

'I shall never forget my first sight of our Japanese conquerors; grubby little men, with bicycles, in dirty khaki uniform and white tennis shoes, wearing tin hats.Surely, I thought, a British garrison cannot have surrendered to men like these?'

Sister Kathleen Thomson, Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service, Hong Kong, December 1941

The nurses stood clutching each other in terror, tears of anguish and sorrow running down their weary, grimy faces. Japanese soldiers were all around them, their bayonets glinting dully in the early morning sun, their khaki uniforms dirty and their faces blackened by smoke and streaked with sweat. Near the nurses stood twenty-one men, some British, some Canadian, some Chinese, all of them completely naked. They were kneeling with their hands tied behind their backs, waiting for something to happen.

A Japanese officer strode imperiously around, his katana sword held stiffly in his left hand. His commands were sharp and guttural. Standing near the British and Chinese nurses was Major Barfill of the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC), commanding officer of the Salesian Mission Advanced Dressing Station in Hong Kong. He was pale and strained by the last few days of hectic work. Kneeling on the grass in a rough line before the Mission were five of his fellow army doctors. Men who had dedicated their lives and their military service to easing the pain of others now were to become victims of a military force who had no concept of compassion, mercy or honour. The nurses were terrified, and rightly so, for the Japanese had a fearsome reputation for murder and sexual assault, gained during their barbarous war of conquest on the Chinese mainland.

The Japanese officer strode towards the kneeling medical men, drawing an automatic pistol from a brown leather holster and cocking it with a harsh metallic click. Standing behind the first British doctor the officer levelled his pistol at the back of the man's head, as Major Barfill watched with unbelieving eyes, muttering 'NO, no, no ...' as surrender degenerated into massacre.

The hospitals in Hong Kong were overwhelmed with thousands of casualties, both military and civilian, from the fierce fighting that had raged across the island until the British surrender on Christmas Day 1941. The main British Military Hospital was at Bowen Road, staffed by twelve British Army nurses from Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service (known as QAS) and two Canadian Army nurses, supported by RAMC male doctors and medics and a large number of Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) nurses who were a mixture of European and Chinese women.

Bowen Road had beds for 200 casualties during peacetime, but many times that number were now crammed into its hallways and wards. The hospital had been hit several times by Japanese artillery and aerial bombardments, the Japanese indiscriminately targeting a clearly marked medical facility. The attacking force made no distinction between combatant and non-combatant – to the Japanese anyone wearing a uniform was fair game, and any military facility a valid target. Many of the wives and children of British businessmen, civil servants and soldiers in the colony had not been evacuated before the Japanese attack on 8 December, and many wives and daughters had joined the VAD, all under the command of Matron 'Billy' Dyson. Everyone, civilian or soldier, European or Chinese, found themselves in the front line as the Japanese assault developed, and enemy aircraft bombed and strafed with impunity across the colony.

In the other British colonies in Asia, war had also arrived unannounced or would shortly arrive. Plenty of warning was given to colonists regarding Japan's intentions, but most preferred to stay put rather than evacuate to India or even to war-torn Britain. Their reasons were of course complex, but generally they could be summarized thus. Firstly, for the civilians living in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tientsin (now Tianjin) or a host of other treaty ports along the China coast, or in Malaya and Singapore, the Far East was their life. They had invested all of their finances and time into building lives in Asia, and packing everything up, resigning from steady employment, and starting again somewhere else was too difficult and unattractive for most to contemplate seriously. Secondly, many genuinely believed that British and Empire forces in the Far East, alongside the Americans, wielded enough military muscle that they would defeat the upstart Japanese if they dared to attack the world's largest empire. It was inconceivable to most Britons that the world's mightiest nations could be humbled by a small island kingdom with an industrial capacity of only one tenth of the United States. Many conveniently forgot that Britain's Asian forces had been severely depleted by the need to send men and machines to Britain and the Middle East where the fighting was very real. Thirdly, returning home to Britain was not an attractive option when placed alongside peacetime Asia. Britain had been heavily bombed, the danger of German invasion had certainly diminished though not yet entirely evaporated, and the nation was suffering from severe food and goods shortages because of the very successful German U-boat offensive in the Atlantic. The journey home was also long and hazardous, involving a lengthy sea journey around the Cape of Good Hope as the Suez Canal and Mediterranean were off limits because of fighting in the Middle East and North Africa. And fourthly, many of the colonists simply would not leave their lives in Asia because they were so much more comfortable than their lives back in Britain. Even a modest salary in Hong Kong or Shanghai meant servants to take care of the house and children, and an exciting social life with its endless whirl of dances, parties and other socializing opportunities to attend. Even those whites in what were considered to be in the lowliest of professions, such as policemen, nonetheless were much better off than their colleagues in Britain, and no matter what one's social rank all whites at least could feel superior to the locals. Seeing things through seems to have been the prevailing attitude among the colonists, and it shows how little an interest most whites took in the affairs of the Chinese that the Rape of Nanking and numerous other atrocities failed to wake them up to what the Japanese might do to them if they came flooding across the colonial borders. Many of the younger, single British men out in the Far East did go home to enlist, while others joined local volunteer military forces to do their bit should a Japanese attack have actually occurred.

At Bowen Road there were two Canadian nurses, Sisters Kay Christie and May Waters, and they had both eagerly volunteered for the job, having only recently arrived in Hong Kong. 'I was just as impatient to go overseas as any of the men,' recalled Christie. 'I was a registered nurse who joined the forces as a nursing sister with the rank of lieutenant.' How she ended up in Hong Kong was rather by chance:

After a number of hospital units sailed to England in 1940 there weren't any more major moves from our area for some time so that, in mid-October, 1941, on being informed that I was slated for duty in a semi-tropical climate and that I had only five minutes to make up my mind, I threw aside my usual caution and immediately accepted this new posting.

Christie and Waters were the only women travelling west from Vancouver via Honolulu on the troopship Awatea. The ship was crowded with men from the Royal Rifles of Canada and Winnipeg Grenadiers, all going to reinforce Hong Kong's tiny garrison. 'On November 16, we docked in Kowloon,' recalled Christie, 'and two days later we were on duty in the British Military Hospital, which was located between Magazine Gap, where the ammunition was stored and the China Command Headquarters – not exactly an ideal place to be during the hostilities.'

Aboard the luxury liner Empress of Australia were fifty-five QAS who were destined to be stationed in Singapore and Hong Kong respectively. They had departed in high spirits from Liverpool in July 1940, travelling in the first-class accommodation aboard ship, and having fun with the many young British officers also aboard. The Matron-in-Chief, Violet Jones, sternly warned the young women to behave themselves properly aboard the liner, but many soon found themselves romantically involved with officers during the voyage east. When the Empress of Australia docked in Hong Kong in September, five of the QAS disembarked, with the remaining fifty destined for the several military hospitals located in Singapore and Malaya.

The British were initially surprised by the ferocity of the Japanese attack on their colonial possessions in the Far East, but they had for too long appeased Japanese militarism and ignored the gathering storm clouds of war. They now paid the price for ignoring all of those signs that had begun with Japan's undeclared war against China in 1937. The British living and working in Asia fooled themselves into believing popular racist stereotypes regarding the Japanese military. It was widely held that the Japanese were individually inferior in every way to the white soldier. They were short, with bandy legs and poor eyesight, and although they had certainly easily defeated the disorganized Chinese, when faced with Anglo-Saxon soldiers the Japanese would soon be put in their place. Many of the whites living in Asia believed that their lives were ultimately worth more than those of their Asian subjects, so when many of them were subsequently captured by the Japanese they were genuinely surprised that their captors treated them with the same mixture of casual brutality, sadism and neglect meted out with alacrity to Asian captives.

The British colony of Hong Kong, located on the southern coast of China, had found itself Ill-prepared for total war. The British Government had been steadily drawing down its armed forces in China as the war grew hotter in Europe and North Africa. Churchill and the British Government naturally viewed the large numbers of British troops, aircraft and ships idling in Far Eastern ports as a useful boost for the home military forces desperately trying to fend off German ambitions. It made short-term sense to make the best use of all available military forces, and to strip the colonies of their garrisons when the need arose. With hindsight, it is easy to see that the Japanese viewed this drawing down of forces as British military weakness, and as providing a golden opportunity to beat the British quickly while their attention was elsewhere. British infantry battalions had been withdrawn from Shanghai for the last time in the summer of 1940, and the defences of Hong Kong reduced to only a pair of battalions. Their job was simply to guard the border, across which could be seen Japanese soldiers occupying the Chinese mainland, and supporting the local police. Those military forces that did remain in Hong Kong were not on top form as the debilitating effects of a tropical climate and an active social scene had sapped the strength of the men. At the time Hong Kong boasted 10,000 prostitutes who worked the hundreds of bars, dance halls and knocking shops busily frequented by the local garrison. The 2nd Battalion, Royal Scots had not seen Britain in seven years, one soldier recalling a dance hall that had been renamed the 'gonorrhoea racetrack' by its patrons. It was these casualties of peace that the young nurses sent to Hong Kong were expected to spend most of their time treating, alongside the usual tropical diseases, training accidents and routine surgeries. None expected a full-scale bloodbath. The life of a young army nurse in Hong Kong prior to the Japanese invasion was magical compared with the austerities and dangers of wartime Britain. 'I had a wonderful year,' recalled one QA recently arrived in Hong Kong. 'It was very social, as it often was overseas. Male officers far outnumbered us girls and there were endless parties. I went sailing. I played squash and tennis. I went dancing ... nobody thought there was going to be a war.'

Military strategists in London soon realized that leaving the defence of one of Britain's most important colonies, and symbol of British prestige in China, to a couple of understrength and physically unfit infantry battalions was astounding folly, and actually invited an attack from the Japanese by demonstrating that Britain had no ability or willingness to defend its Asian colonies. The Japanese ranged throughout eastern and southern China, including along the border with Hong Kong, and could have struck with ease at the colony at a time of their choosing. The British even lacked reconnaissance aircraft in Hong Kong with which to keep a weather eye on Japanese deployments close to the frontier.

The defence of Hong Kong, although a British colony, was not to be a wholly British affair. The territory's defenders in December 1941 included Chinese, Indian and Canadian soldiers, all of whom were under the command of the competent and brave fifty-year-old career British soldier, Major General Christopher Maltby, who knew more than most the ultimate futility of the resistance he was being asked by Churchill to undertake. Maltby, though brave, faced very serious difficulties in Hong Kong that threatened to scupper any attempt to fight off a Japanese attack when it inevitably came. By November 1941 it was clear to everyone that the Japanese were on the verge of hostilities, but Maltby was chronically short of experienced soldiers and equipment with which to make such a stand militarily sustainable. In other words, if the Japanese attacked, the British would eventually lose. But although they would undoubtedly lose, Churchill knew that it was important, indeed paramount, that British prestige be maintained in Asia. One way to make sure of that was a fight to the death, with the British only being kicked out of Hong Kong after an extremely bloody and terrible defensive battle – a 'to the last man, last round' show.

Air Chief Marshal Sir Robert Brooke-Popham, commander of British Far Eastern Command, demanded that Hong Kong be reinforced forthwith to prevent a complete walkover when the Japanese attacked, and his recommendations caused a policy u-turn in Whitehall. Brooke-Popham argued that a limited reinforcement of Hong Kong would allow Maltby and the garrison to delay any proposed Japanese attack, thereby gaining time for the Empire elsewhere in Asia. It might also have prevented a swift and humiliating capitulation, as mentioned, that would have damaged British prestige at home and abroad. Certainly the thought of buying time for other British colonies in Asia had its appeal to Churchill, and it was probably this factor that convinced the Prime Minister to order reinforcements be rushed to the territory.

To have defended Hong Kong properly, and actually fought off a Japanese invasion, military analysts calculated that at least six full infantry brigades would have been required, which equated to eighteen infantry battalions, or exactly half the infantry strength of the modern British Army in 2009. Britain's military commitments elsewhere meant that this level of force could not be spared; most battalions sent east were being shipped to Singapore and Malaya where the main showdown was predicted to occur. Instead, Brooke-Popham believed that two brigades totalling just six battalions could impose a sufficient delay on Japanese plans to buy the British time in Malaya and Singapore, which remained Churchill's primary strategic focus in the Far East. The Hong Kong garrison would be sacrificed for the sake of the Empire and the honour of the British Army. General Maltby was told in no uncertain terms by his political bosses in London to fight on for as long as possible before surrendering, and to expect no relief.

The forces Brooke-Popham had shipped to Hong Kong were a mixed bag regarding their training, ability and combat experience. Maltby had two regular, though understrength, British battalions for the defence: 2nd Battalion, Royal Scots and 1st Battalion, The Middlesex Regiment. Canada, at Churchill's insistence, had recently shipped two infantry battalions to the colony to support the British, the 1st Battalion, Winnipeg Grenadiers and the 1st Battalion, Royal Rifles of Canada, along with some nurses, but neither unit had seen any action before nor had the men had sufficient time to acclimatize to the tropical conditions in Hong Kong before the Japanese attacked. They had not even been properly inoculated against tropical diseases before being sent up the line, a factor that was to devastate their ranks in captivity.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "The Real Tenko"
by .
Copyright © 2009 Mark Felton.
Excerpted by permission of Pen and Sword Books Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements,
Introduction,
Chapter 1 – Black Christmas,
Chapter 2 – The Second Best Camp,
Chapter 3 – A Band of Angels,
Chapter 4 – Escape from Singapore,
Chapter 5 – Bloodbath at the Beach,
Chapter 6 – New Britain,
Chapter 7 – Comfort Women,
Chapter 8 – Barbed Wire Horizon,
Chapter 9 – Paradise Road,
Chapter 10 – Released from Bondage,
Chapter 11 – Debt of Honour,
Appendix A – Chronology of the Asia-Pacific War,
Sources and Bibliography,
Index,

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