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Amazing lost sketches of life inside Japanese PoW camp discovered in a shoe box
dailymail.co.uk ^ | 9. 16.11

Posted on 09/16/2011 2:28:37 PM PDT by InvisibleChurch

Astonishing drawings of British soldiers in brutal Japanese Prisoner of War camps have turned up nearly 70 years later on TV's Antiques Roadshow. The lost sketches showing the appalling conditions the men endured were drawn by artist soldier John Mennie who gave them to fellow PoW Eric Jennings.

Mr Jennings never spoke about his wartime experiences and his family were stunned when they found the sketches stashed away in a shoe box after his death.

One of the drawings is a rare image of the 'Selerang Square Squeeze' - a shocking atrocity meted out to 16,000 PoWs in Changi, Singapore in 1942. The Japanese kettled the Allied soldiers in a cramped square for five days in unbearable heat to make them sign documents stating they would not try to escape. Many men died from disease and dysentery during the incident and four more were callously executed by their sadistic captors. A second drawing shows a British surgeon carrying out a life-saving operation on an emaciated prisoner in the open. Another picture shows a group of impoverished prisoners in their underpants singing Christmas carols to keep their spirits up. There are also 30 excellent pencil portraits of PoWs and six larger colour drawings that depict the horrors of the situation.

(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: japanesepowcamps; japanesepows; pow
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To: M. Thatcher

Agreed. They look so young.


21 posted on 09/16/2011 4:24:20 PM PDT by sgtyork (The secret of happiness is freedom, and the secret of freedom, courage. Thucydides)
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To: InvisibleChurch

A large number of NM National Guard were captured in Bataan, and one used scraps of cloth to make an American flag which he hid for many years, knowing that if it were found he would be killed. When the Japanese abandoned the camp at the end of the war, he hoisted it up the flag pole. It was later discovered that it may have kept the Navy from strafing the camp, not knowing it was a POW facility.


22 posted on 09/16/2011 4:24:52 PM PDT by Tijeras_Slim
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To: shorty_harris

If I recall, Eric Liddel, winner of the gold medal in the ‘24 Olympics, (who famously refused to run a qualifing race for the 100meter his strongest event because it was being held on a Sunday, but won the 400 meter) died in an interment camp as a prisoner of the Japanese.


23 posted on 09/16/2011 4:34:47 PM PDT by mware (By all that you hold dear on this good earth, I bid you stand, Men of the West)
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To: InvisibleChurch
A more detailed description of the absolute depravity that made up the implementation of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere:

The Knights of Bushido-Hardbound: A Short History of Japanese War Crimes

The author acted as Deputy Judge Advocate General for the British Army of the Rhine, giving legal advice on the prosecution of war criminals in the British zone of occupied Germany.

24 posted on 09/16/2011 4:38:53 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: oh8eleven

From wikipedia - In 2002, TV Guide named Hogan’s Heroes the fifth worst TV show of all time (p 180, Running Press, Philadelphia, 2007).[12] The listing for Hogan’s Heroes in particular accuses the show of trivializing the suffering of real life POWs and the victims of the Holocaust with its comedic take on prison camps in the Third Reich.


25 posted on 09/16/2011 4:42:49 PM PDT by I Drive Too Fast
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To: WOBBLY BOB

800 to 1600 Pounds? I think they are priceless and they belong in a museum that is interested in preserving history, not being politically correct.

I had a friend, now deceased, who survived the Bataan Death March. To his dying day, he refused to accept a ride in a Japanese car. He preferred to walk.


26 posted on 09/16/2011 4:48:17 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: mware

The British Royal Crown did not send a delegation to Japan when Emperor Hirohito (WAR CRIMINAL) finally died, for good reason.

I don’t think the Aussies did either.

He should have been hanged with Tojo.

My dad was in the 14th Air Force(Flying Tigers) and help swept the JAP from the skies of China.

Remember Pearl Harbor when BOMBS AWAY over Hiroshima


27 posted on 09/16/2011 4:48:23 PM PDT by wetgundog (" Extremism in the Defense of Liberty is no Vice")
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To: I Drive Too Fast
From wikipedia - In 2002, TV Guide named Hogan’s Heroes the fifth worst TV show of all time

I'd watch Hogan's Heroes before about 95% of the other crapola that has ever come out of Hollyweird. Not that Hogan's Heroes is particularly good, but it does have a few clever and comedic characters.

28 posted on 09/16/2011 4:53:27 PM PDT by RingerSIX (My wife and I took an AIDS vaccine that they offer down at our Church.)
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To: mware

Wasn’t the movie called Chariots of Fire about Liddell?


29 posted on 09/16/2011 4:54:57 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: wetgundog
Our high school principal was a flying tiger.

His last name was Neumann. Can't recall his first name.

The Japanese culture did not permit any kind of pity towards the enemy. I recall reading a book on POW's of the Japanese. I had to stop reading when I got to a part where they dissected a living POW.

30 posted on 09/16/2011 4:55:47 PM PDT by mware (By all that you hold dear on this good earth, I bid you stand, Men of the West)
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To: InvisibleChurch; WOBBLY BOB

Most of the heroes of WWII refused to talk about their experiences.


31 posted on 09/16/2011 4:57:54 PM PDT by afraidfortherepublic
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To: afraidfortherepublic

Yes,Chariots of Fire focued on the UK’s 1924 Olympic team, Abrahams, and Liddell were the two major people they focused on.


32 posted on 09/16/2011 4:57:54 PM PDT by mware (By all that you hold dear on this good earth, I bid you stand, Men of the West)
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To: djf
It wasn’t until years later, after he passed, I found out he had been a medic...

I had an uncle, a surgeon, who served in WW2 and I used to ask him about it in my youth. He'd smile and change the subject.

After he passed my mom told me that he had volunteered with a number of doctors at this hospital and (I guess you you could do this back then) they all went together to North Africa where they set up a hospital to treat the wounded. It was in the rear, so safe. The wounded would end up getting battlefield treatment and transferred to some sort of aid station where a train would take them up to the hospital, several hours journey away. They were still in bad shape at that point though. Someone had to ride on that train full of horridly wounded men to keep them alive and, I suppose in some instances, comfort them in their final moments. My uncle got the job. I'm sure he couldn't do much on that train but I'm also sure he did what he could. I'm sure he saw some terrible, terrible things. It was not something I think he enjoyed thinking about and I do regret reminding him but how was I to know? Thank God men like him left their comfortable lives and saved the world.

33 posted on 09/16/2011 5:03:47 PM PDT by pepsi_junkie (Who is John Galt?)
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To: InvisibleChurch

I read “Unbroken” months ago. Louis Zamperini’s story told me all I needed to know. They deserved the nukes they got.

And some handwring over pint panties put on prisoners.


34 posted on 09/16/2011 5:07:54 PM PDT by SueRae (I can see November 2012 from my HOUSE!!!!!!!!)
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To: mware

The Japanese culture did not permit any kind of pity towards the enemy


However, that was not always the case from what I read. I understand the Russian POWs taken during the Russo-Japanese War were very well treated. Many did not wish to return home after the end of the war.


35 posted on 09/16/2011 5:12:28 PM PDT by warsaw44
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To: djf

My old dad was in Marine reserves after the Korean war, and before Nam. He had a Korea vet squaddie, who, after a few beers, would stare far away and answer that question, “Did I ever kill anybody? Well I guess I did. They just kept coming and I just kept shooting and they wouldn’t stop... So I guess I did.”


36 posted on 09/16/2011 5:14:30 PM PDT by flowerplough (My favorite lesbian in the whole world is Joan Jett.)
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To: KevinDavis; mware; Oatka
Andy Rooney writes in his book ‘ My War ‘ that the original idea for Hogans Heroes came from his friend Don Bevan. Bevan was an artist, worked for the New York Daily News and Stars and Stripes all while being a gunner on a B-17.

Beven’s bomber was shot down and he ended up a POW in Germany. While Rooney was with the Third Army as a reporter they were over running POW camps. Rooney ends up running into Beven and another POW named Ed Trzynski who went on with great enthusiasm about a play they wrote while prisoners. The play takes place in ‘ Stalag 17 ‘ and they performed it while in the camp.

Rooney gives the men the names of some NY contacts including literary agent Harold Ober. After the war the play is made into the well known movie.

But after CBS made ‘ Hogan's Heroes ‘ both Bevan and Trzynski sued as there were so many similarities. They were awarded a very large sum by the courts.

37 posted on 09/16/2011 5:28:03 PM PDT by warsaw44
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To: RingerSIX

Worst shows of all time:

Jersey Shore
PeeWees Playhouse
Maury Povitch
Jerry Springer
Big Brother
American Idol
Dancing With the Stars
Meet the Osbournes
The Ropers
Entertainment Tonite/Access Hollywood/Byron Allen/Made in Hollywood - anything along the infotainment theme
The Hills
Urkel

I could go on. Plenty more shows worse than Hogan’s Heroes.


38 posted on 09/16/2011 5:38:33 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (I'd like to tell you, but then I'd have to kill you.)
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To: InvisibleChurch
we had a family friend who survived the Bataan death march, to this day my mother will not own a Japanese car

When I watched the movie "Paradise Road" about the women who survived death camp and formed a women's choir, I started reading the back story of some of the characters portrayed, and found the stories written by the nurses who were captured during the evacuation of Singapore

Amazing stuff, some humans are made of

Betty Jeffrey
http://www.angellpro.com.au/Jeffrey.htm

39 posted on 09/16/2011 6:23:25 PM PDT by silverleaf (Common sense is not so common - Voltaire)
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To: warsaw44
...I understand the Russian POWs taken during the Russo-Japanese War were very well treated. Many did not wish to return home after the end of the war.

That is news to me. What is your source?

40 posted on 09/16/2011 6:42:36 PM PDT by OldCorps
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