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Braddon, Russell - The - Naked - Island (1952)

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The story provides insights into the experiences of British prisoners of war in Singapore during World War 2, including the harsh conditions they faced and the mental and physical toll of imprisonment.

The story is set in a prison in Singapore during World War 2, where the narrator and other British soldiers have been imprisoned by the Japanese.

The narrator faces immense physical hardship, such as illness and lack of resources, as well as psychological challenges as a result of the deprivation, lack of privacy, and constant presence of other prisoners.

THE NAKED ISLAND

THE NAKED ISLAND


BY RUSSELL BRADDON
DOUBLEDAY & COMPANY, INC., GARDEN CITY, N.Y,, 1953
FIRST PUBLISHED, 1953, IN THE UNITED STATES
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER: 52-13375
1952, by Russell Reading Braddon Reserved in the United States At the Country Li
fe Press, Garden City,
N.Y.
AUTHOR S NOTE
This book is written as one man's fear of things that lie ahead. It is also writ
ten as one man's tribute to the
Britishers capacity for living fearlessly and gently.
It is especially a tribute to two men--Padre Noel Duckworth and Major Kevin Paga
n--who lived more
fearlessly and more gently than all others.
It is dedicated to a Welshman called "Mush."
R.B.
BOOK ONE
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
1 THE FOURTEENTH STEP
2 INSANITY IN THE FAMILY?
3 FIVE-BOB-A-DAY BUTCHERS
4 "NOW IS THE HOUR"
5 "BAD DAMES"
6 "HOW TO LIVE IN MALAYA"
7 "HULLO, JOE"
8 "BATTLE STATIONS"
9 AIRBORNE INVASION
BOOK TWO
1 OUR FIRST GAOL
2 "SHANGRI-LA"
3 "PUDU S GROWING PAINS"
4 HOW TO BE A P.O.W.
5 TOJO NUMBER TEN
6 THE PHONY CAPTIVITY
7 SINGAPORE INTERLUDE
8 BORE-HOLES
BOOK THREE
1 "BRING YOUR PIANO"
2 KANEMOTOSAN
3 "ULCERS AND, BUSHIDO"
BOOK FOUR
1 A HOME TO BE BUILT
2 THE AERODROME
3 THEATRE
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
4 "HARRY THE HAWK"
5 THE FOURTH YEAR
6 ON OUR RETURN
THE HIROSHIMA INCIDENT
POSTSCRIPT
1 THE FOURTEENTH STEP
There were twenty-two steps altogether from the courtyard of the gaol up to the
cells. I had got into the habit
of counting those steps. Made them seem shorter, or easier. Anyway I had got int
o the habit of counting. And
at the fourteenth I stopped, done. Because I could go no further, I lowered myse
lf onto the step above me and
took stock of my surroundings.
At the foot of the stairs, barely visible in the gloom, sat the sentry steel-hel
meted, knees wide apart, rifle and
bayonet across his knees. Silent, unintelligent, unfriendly. Beyond him a small
courtyard about thirty yards
square. Round the courtyard ran a high prison wall-sheer and made unscalable by
five or six rows of
loose-piled bricks balanced twenty feet up on its top.
Above my head, all along the balcony which ran from the top of the stairs round
three sides of the ancient
block of cells, the darkness was restless with the small sounds of men who slept
neither comfortably nor well.
And at my feet, also on the staircase, lying doubled up over three or four steps
, sprawled a half -naked soldier
an Argyll, I recognized from his cap which, last of his possessions, he wore eve
n at night.
I had passed him on the way down to the latrines. Then, he had writhed on the st
airs with the griping pains of
dysentery; and, having lost all control of his bowels, his legs were fouled and
his pride outraged.
"Anything I can do, Jock?" I had asked him.
"Och, man, leave me alone!" he had exclaimed. I regretted my intrusion. That was
the trouble nowadays; one
was never alone, not even on a prison staircase in the early hours of the mornin
g.
"Sorry," I muttered, and, stepping over him, continued on down to the sentry.
"Benjo-ka?" I asked him.
"Benjo hei" he grunted. Permission granted, I crossed the twenty feet of maggot-
ridden mud to the latrine.
Soon I returned. In accordance with instructions, I thanked the sentry.
"Aringato? I said, to which he replied, disinterestedly, "Okayga."
I had walked to the stairs; climbed them slowly; passed the young Argyll (withou
t speaking) and then stopped
exhausted at the fourteenth step.
I looked at the sprawled figure again. Even in the gloom I could see fair hair u
nder the black cap with its
check colours: sturdy legs: one hand clenched tightly over the back edge of the
step on which my feet rested:
head on one side and a clean-cut jaw.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
A Scot of the best type. I hoped no one would come down the stairs and see eithe
r of us at that moment. I
decided then that, since I too was incapable of moving, I could now decently add
ress him.
"How are you doing, Jock?" I asked. He didn't answer. He didn't seem resentful o
f the intrusion, however, so I
persisted, with a feeble attempt at humour:
"Toss you for who carries who up the rest of the stairs," I said and again he di
dn't answer.
I knew then what had happened; knew without looking. The Argyll was dead. Within
a week of arriving in the
gaol, the first man in our seven hundred had died not of wounds, not in battle,
but from exhaustion and
privation.
Weaker then ever, I leant back. This was something I could not easily understand
. Death in war was an
unpleasant event which must befall many not oneself, naturally, but many others,
even one's friends. One
regretted the fact, but one did not bewail it.
But this this death due to lack of food and drugs, both of which were plentiful,
this was something against
which one could not steel oneself. A week, I thought, and one dead already. A yo
ung, sturdy Scot. There must
be lots of weeks to go yet before we would be out. A year probably, I thought. T
hat was if they didn't shoot us
as they'd said they would. Then, more honestly, I added to myself, "four years,
more likely." It didn't bear
thinking about.
2 INSANITY IN THE FAMILY?
I looked at the Argyll. He was about my age, perhaps a little younger, perhaps t
wenty. I reflected that only
recently I had taken the activity and the fleetness of foot and the exuberance o
f youth entirely for granted. I
reflected that only a fortnight ago I should never have considered mounting thes
e stairs any other way than
two at a time. Now, one by one, counting idiotically, I had crawled up: and--fin
ally--had bogged down
altogether at number fourteen.
In the dark, on the stairs, resting my elbows on my knees, my forehead on my fis
ts, I gave myself over to
misery. I found myself retracing in my mind the sequence of events which had led
me, so inevitably, to this
staircase between the punishment cells and the courtyard of Pudu Gaol, Kuala Lum
pur, onetime
administration centre of British Malaya.
It was that brass band I blamed most. Day after day, with unremitting fervour, i
t had played martial airs
outside the Sydney Recruiting Office in a jolly attempt to convince young Austra
lians that war was just one
long march by Sousa. Thousands of volunteers (the theory was) hypnotized by the
blare of brass would pour,
in a Hamelin-like procession, into the Australian Imperial Forces.
Once before, months earlier, I had volunteered, only to be told to go away and g
et my mother's consent, and
finish my university course. Accordingly, I had obtained my mother's consent and
passed my exams, and
become a Bachelor of Arts. This, to my limited intelligence, did not appear an e
xcessively helpful
contribution to the Empire's war effort, so, at the beginning of 1941, I had ret
urned to the Recruiting Office,
determined this time to enlist and kill many Germans. And there, outside the sma
ll wooden hut (which, in the
middle of the grandeur of Martin Place, and immediately above the gentlemen's la
vatory, was so typical a
product of the military mind), stood the scarlet ranks of a brass band playing m
artial airs.
Irritated, I stopped short on the corner of Martin Place and Pitt Street. If I w
as going to join up, I was going to
join up of my own accord. I was not going to be wafted into the Army on the end
of any conductor's baton,
however magnificent his moustache or innumerable his campaign ribbons. Stubbornl
y, taking care not to walk
in step with the march that stirred the depths of the city, I strolled away up t
he hill, crossed Castlereagh Street,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
crossed Elizabeth Street, caught the Bondi tram and went for a swim.
Next day, punctually after my morning lectures, I ran from the University Chambe
rs, wherein the Law School
was housed, down to the Recruiting Office in Martin Place. And there, once again
, the sun glinting on the
silver of epaulettes and the gold of instruments, was the band! Again I went for
a swim. Every day for a week
the band was there and every day for a week, while others joined up and were con
signed to Syria and Darwin
and England, I went swimming.
Then at last the band vanished, and in I marched, into the small hut in the midd
le of Martin Place,
immediately above the gentle men's lavatory. The same recruiting sergeant greete
d me in the same bluff and
congenial manner as he had when first I was interviewed by him a manner that had
all the roguish humour of
a commercial traveller and all the sincerity of a pawnbroker.
"Hullo there, laddy," he said, "going to join our Army?" I nodded. "How old are
you, laddy?" he asked. I said,
"Twenty," and he said, "Tell it to the Marines, laddy, tell it to the Marines. E
ighteen years ago you wouldn't
even have been a gleam in your father's eye, now would you, eh?" Realizing that
the sergeant was the
possessor of a particularly hammy wit, I didn't answer. I simply placed on the t
able before him a form signed
by my mother the form which rendered minors eligible for enlistment
"Mother's signed this, laddy," he observed astutely, "why not your father?"
"Died eight years ago," I told him. At this the sergeant appeared embarrassed an
d started pounding his pockets
one after the other in the frenzied manner of all smokers who know quite well th
at they have no cigarettes but
wish to give the impression that this is a fact they have only just discovered.
Finally, with an air of childlike
candour, which was most unbecoming, he turned to me and said: "Wouldn't it, eh?
clean out of smokes! Got a
cigarette to spare, laddy?" I said I was sorry, I hadn't. "Got the makings?" he
persisted, and his brown face,
with its short ginger moustache, assumed an air of pleading even less pleasing t
han the one of candour.
I said I didn't smoke. Making the best of it, he laughed abruptly and inevitably
remarked, "Don't smoke, don't
drink, and don't go out with bad women." He then turned to the private who was t
he clerk in the office, and,
abandoning all pretence of pleading, said peremptorily, "Give us a fag, Snowy,"
and Snowy, with
considerable ill-grace, passed him over a cigarette. The sergeant then slapped a
ll his pockets again one after
the other so, rather wearily, Snowy also tossed over his matches. The sergeant l
it up, inhaled deeply, blew a
cloud of smoke out of the hut door towards the gentlemen's lavatory and then tir
ing for the moment of
swelling His Majesty's Forcesstepped out of the office into the sunlight of Mart
in Place.
"Be back in half an hour, Snow," he said, tossing him his matches. "You, laddy,"
he added, "you come back at
two and we'll have transport for you over to Victoria Barracks." Another cloud o
f smoke and he was gone.
"That bastard," observed Snow, with detached calm, "is the greatest cold bite in
the A.I.F.!" And, having
delivered himself of this verdict, he, too, turned his back on me and began gloo
mily going through a vast pile
of Army forms. Ignored by all in this my latest attempt to fight the Germans, I
followed the sergeant's
example and stepped out into the sunlight of Martin Place. Probably, I thought,
I would go for a swim
All of these trivial incidents were to control my destiny. As I stepped out of t
he hut, I was hailed by a
boyhood friend who, looking most surprised, said, "You joining up?" and when I n
odded, asked, "What unit?"
"God knows," I told him it didn't seem important anyway.
"Well, what branch of the Army?" he asked.
"What do you mean, what branch?" I demanded. It had frankly never occurred to me
that armies had
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
branches. As far as I was concerned, impelled by one's sense of duty, or by what
ever other motive it was, one
just joined the Army and killed Germans.
"Well," he explained, "infantry, artillery, A.S.C., sappers what branch?"
"I don't know," I assured him, "they haven't told me. Infantry, I suppose." This
appeared to shock him greatly.
The infantry, apparently, were not at all a good thing. The infantry were just f
oot-sloggers the P.B.1. "You'd
better come up and see Dad,' he told me: and so, being an obliging youth, I went
up and saw Dad. *
Dad was a solicitor, who asked all sorts of penetrating questions about my futur
e military plans, none of
which, to his unconcealed dismay, I could answer. Finally, he made the fateful d
ecision.
"You'd better join your father's old unit," he said firmly. "I know the C.O. I'l
l write him a note and get him to
apply for you. Then when you go out to Victoria Barracks, you'll be requisitione
d."
"I'll be what?" I asked.
"Requisitioned," he said. Whatever it was, I didn't like the sound of it. But I
had been well brought up, and he
was an old friend of the family, so I merely repeated the word "requisitioned,"
noting mentally that it was very
uncouth, and said politely, "Thank you, sir," and left. Thus, though fortunately
at that moment I was blissfully
unaware of the fact, was my entire future settled by the playing of brass bands,
the sudden desire of a
recruiting sergeant for a smoke rather than an immediate recruit, and the firm p
ulling of strings by an old
friend of the family the better to procure that heart-warming procedure known as
"requisitioning."
Arrived at Victoria Barracks, all did not go smoothly not at all smoothly. We re
cruits (there were about a
dozen of us that day) had been greeted with overwhelming bonhomie by yet another
sergeant, a middle-aged
man with less charm than stomach the latter being firmly girt up by a pair of va
st trousers and yards of
webbing belt. He had a ready line of patter, "Just this way, son," he had said.
"You'll be right, me boy... just sit
here and well have you fixed up before you can say Jack Robinson.". *. "Now you
boys, get to know one
another."... And finally presumably to hasten the process of getting to know one
another "Just come this way
and strip off..."
So we all went that way and stripped off and for the next three quarters of an h
our remained stripped off,
whilst the Army lost all interest in us. We just stood round surreptitiously com
paring sun tans and birth marks,
until finally, six feet of complete disinterest, in the shape of a medical order
ly, emerged from behind a turf
guide and summoned us, one by one, to be weighed and measured. Next, in to the d
octors for an examination.
Doctors were a tribe for whom I had never had much time. The one before whom I n
ow stood filled me with
no confidence at all. He had the outward appearances of a publican and the delic
ate hands of a navvy. He
confirmed my worst fears about the profession in general and himself in particul
ar by thrusting an inquisitive
finger against what is euphemistically termed one's lower abdomen and saying, "C
ough."
If that, I thought to myself, is where he imagines I get a sore throat, no wonde
r he had to join the Army! I
stood silent and contemptuous.
Irritably he looked up from the inquisitive finger and my lower abdomen. "I said
Cough," he told me. I
nodded. "Well then," he ordered, very abruptly indeed, "Cough!" With no great co
nviction, I coughed.
"Uh-huh," he said, and removed the finger and averted the gaze and wrote somethi
ng down on a form which I
tried very hard to read but with no success at all.
"Now," he said in a businesslike manner, "some questions." I prepared myself for
questioning.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"What diseases have you had?" This, I thought, at least displayed a pleasantly p
aternal interest in my past, so,
even though it appeared quite irrelevant to the business of killing Germans, I a
nswered him briskly, saying,
"Measles and whooping cough."
He looked most disappointed. "No chicken pox?" he queried. I denied the chicken
pox.
"No mumps?" I denied the mumps. I also denied broken limbs, missing teeth and in
teresting scars. The doctor
became quite patently bored and attempted a different gambit.
"Do you throw fits?" he asked hopefully. I denied that I threw fits.
"Mother or father throw fits?" he persisted. I said, "No." His face clouded with
despondency but he pressed
on: "Any insanity in the family at all?" he demanded desperately "grandparents o
r any thing?" Again I said
no: whereupon quite disgruntledhe wrote down on the form that I didn't throw fit
s, that my mother and father
didn't throw fits and that my grandparents were sane. Meantime I stood by, still
quite naked, and listened to
the other naked recruits also being interrogated about the state of their grandp
arents' sanity. I suddenly had a
terrible desire to assure the doctor who looked like a publican that actually bo
th my parents had the D.T.s and
that my great-grandmother had been as mad as a cut snake. These reveries were, h
owever, completely
disrupted by a curt order to bend over. All around the room at that moment recru
its were bending over and
very unsightly it was, too.
"Why?" I asked.
"Because," said the publican, with quite unwarranted impatience, "I want to see
if you've got piles."
"I haven't." I told him firmly and remained vertical.
"Bend over," he bellowed. "You can't expect me to take your word for it--got to
see for myself."
"You didn't want to see my grandparents," I argued.
"I am not," he hissed, "examining your grandparents for piles, Now bend over."
"You asked me," I pointed out, "whether my grandparents were cracked. I said, No
. You didn't say, Show me
your uncracked grandparents! Now, you ask, have I got piles and I say, 'No,' and
you say, Bend over. It
doesn't make sense."
With a look of undisguised hostility, he straightened up in his chair.
"All right," he capitulated, "you have not got piles. Now, for God's sake," and
he said the words very slowly
and with not much good will, "go away. Go next door," and, dismissing me, he poi
nted to the far room. So off
I marched in naked dignity, whilst behind me the publican sat writing furiously
all over my medical form.
The next room turned out to be occupied by an orderly, by one of my fellow recru
its a huge, amiable and
incredibly sun-tanned Life Saver who rejoiced in the nickname of Tarzan and fina
lly by a most impressive
array of bottles. There were milk bottles, ink bottles, oyster bottles, beer bot
tles bottles of every description.
Pressing an ink bottle into my hand, the orderly said, "Fill this," and, at the
same time, passed Tarzan a milk
bottle. I gazed curiously at my bottle Swan's Blue Black, I noticed.
"What with?" I demanded, at which the orderly looked quite incredulous and Tarza
n flung me, over his vast
brown shoulder (a brown made all the more striking by the white gleam of his but
tocks), a patronizing grin.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The orderly explained what with, and simultaneously Tarzan proudly produced his
milk botdeful, so that I
could even see what with. This was a facet of Army life for which I was wholly u
nprepared. In fact so far all
the facets were facets for which I had been wholly unprepared.
"Can't be done,' I said.
"Why not?" demanded the orderly.
"Don't feel like it," I explained.
"Don't give me that, mate," said the orderly, disagreeably. "Now come on: fill i
t up and I'll test it for sugar."
Although the prospect of being tested for sugar struck me as (so far) the only i
nteresting event of the entire
day, I had, reluctantly, to refuse. I had to confess, sadly, that at that moment
I was as dry as the Sahara: utterly
arid, in fact. There was not the smallest possibility of Messrs. Swan's ink bott
le being even dampened. At this,
the orderly looked most ill done by. Tarzan, however, intervened on my behalf.
"The kid's nervous," he said. "Turn on the tap. A running tap'll fix him up."
The orderly, though obviously aggrieved, was a good-natured lad and turned on a
tap. He, Tarzan, and two
newly arrived recruits watched my reactions with absorbed interest. I remained a
rid. I was not nervous, but
definitely I was arid.
Wanning to his task, the orderly went into the closet in the corner of the room
and gave the chain a lusty pull.
There were loud rushing water noises, but I remained arid.
Tarzan and the other two recruits turned on all the rest of the taps in the labo
ratory and at once the room filled
with the sound of falling water but I was unmoved. Three more recruits entered a
nd one of them a young
ex-milkmansuggested whistling. It worked with his spaniel pup, he said. Soon the
whole building resounded
to watery splashes and sibilant and insinuating whistles, as the entire medical
staff and a dozen potential
soldiers united in bringing to its successful conclusion Operation Ink Bottle. B
ut finally, when it be came
obvious that my bottle (the milkman's spaniel notwithstanding) now the cynosure
of twenty pairs of eyes was
doomed to remain empty, everyone admitted failure. Taps were turned off; cistern
s slowly refilled and
became silent: even Tarzan desisted from a particularly seductive line of whistl
e.
There was only one thing to do. I dressed and went out and drank three chocolate
milk shakes. I then returned
and filled my bottle with consummate ease, and was thereupon tested for sugar wh
ich turned out to be not
interesting at all, and I still can't remember whether I have it or not, though
one of them I know to be an
extremely bad thing.
This done, we were hustled down to the main hall in the barracks to take the oat
h, which is the final act of
enlistment. The recruiting sergeant was ponderously jovial as he herded us along
.
Like children repeating the alphabet, we mumbled out the phrases of the oath as
they were gabbled at us by an
individual whose voice glowed with all the warmth and patriotic fervour of a man
ual of Military Law, And at
the second upon which the last word of the oath fell from our lips, the recruiti
ng sergeant, his bonhomie shed
with all the speed of a heavy coat upon the arrival of a heat wave, started scre
aming: "All right now, you
blokes git fell in. C'mon, c'mon. Shake a leg or you'll be doing some spud-bashi
ng--you're not civvies any
longer, you know." And straight away, to the accom paniment of his hysterical sc
reams of "Left, right, left,
right" and of mutinous backchat from ourselves, we ambled off.
"Pick it up there, pick it up," screamed the sergeant. "Left... Right... Left...
" But the small squad of recruits
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
only burst into a squall of abuse and, sturdily ignoring all his instructions, s
traggled along looking remarkably
un-military.
"Silly old bastard," Tarzan remarked during a comparative lull.
"What's that you said?" bellowed the sergeant, bringing us to a violent halt.
"I said," stated Tarzan with awful calm, "silly old bastard." And, to remove all
doubts, the milkman added:
"He meant youl"
Uproar ensued. Everyone enjoyed themselves enormously. Colourful Australian phra
ses filled the air with
lurid insubordination. And into the midst of this chaos exploded an overwhelming
and humourless bellow
which informed us in incontrovertible tones that we were in the Army now, not a
bloody rabble! It blasted us
straight on to the end of the vaccination queue. It was our first experience of
a sergeant major.
"Stick by me, kid," said Tarzan, "I'll look after you." Three minutes later a wo
man doctor pricked the huge
man's sun-tanned arm with her needle. Uttering a small sigh, Tarzan swayed dizzi
ly on his feet and crashed,
all six feet four of him, to the ground in a faint.
"Mug lair," commented the milkman dispassionately as he surveyed the prostrate g
iant. He held out his arm to
the woman doctor. I followed suit. Then bereft of my protector, who still lay un
conscious, I was marched off
with the rest of the squad to the sleeping quarters. Marched off to the accompan
iment of howls from all sides
of "You'll be sorry, rookie, you'll be sorry," and to the recruiting sergeant's
frenzied shouts of, "You're in the
Army now. Come on there: pick it up. Left, right, left, right." I wasn't at all
sure that this bedlam was what I'd
bargained for. Certainly it gave no indication of my ever killing Germans.
Our sleeping quarters turned out to be the pigpens of the Royal Agricultural Sho
wground of Sydney. These
had been whitewashed with nice dean whitewash and contained all the usual fittin
gs for sleeping and hanging
clothes and storing toothbrushes that most concrete pigpens do. Two men moved in
to each pen, presumably
working on the refreshing military principle that two adult males equal one priz
e pig.
My companion was the ex-milkman. He was about nineteen, was very little more tha
n five feet in height,
sported a green shirt, brown slacks, a thin white belt with a silver buckle stam
ped "1940" on its front and
"Made in Japan" on its back, and he had no teeth at all.
"Don't like them drills," he explained, "so I got em all whipped out. Bloke at N
ewtown done it for a quid."
I had a brief and shocking vision of the dental gentleman at Newtown whipping ou
t thirty-two teeth for a quid.
Meantime, the victim of this atrocity, apparently quite unmoved, asked me my nam
e. Glad of the change of
conversation, I said: "Russ, what's yours?" and he said, Cyril, only his friends
called him Mick. "You call me
Mick," he added sociably.
There was a bellow at the doorway our old friend the recruiting sergeant. "Right
," he roared, "five volunteers
wanted for a job." And while men scattered in every direction or hid behind the
walls of their pens he detailed
them off, pointing with a stubby nicotinestained finger, "You... you... you..."
"Meet you in the dyke," Mick hissed, and fled. Heading for the opposite door, an
d ignoring the frenzied
shouts of the sergeant as he called after me, "Hey you... that fair-haired bloke
!" I too fled, and a few seconds
later met Mick in the latrines.
"Nice place you've got here," I told him, as I surveyed the row of thunder-boxes
and appreciated the skill with
which a long line of military minds had thus contrived to deny the ex-civilian e
ven this his last and most
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
trusted place of privacy.
Mick grunted indifferently. "Glad you tricked old Mud-Guts," he said. "Heard him
screaming for you."
I asked had he himself had any difficulty in escaping the sergeant. Mick gave hi
s white belt a contemptuous
tug.
"The day that mug cops me," he declared, "I'll take a running jump at meself," a
nd having thus confidently
disposed of the sergeant, he added: "Where to now? Can't stop here all day." And
, having not the least
inclination to dispute this statement, I suggested a swim. Mick agreed readily.
"See you back at the sty," he said. Without more ado we proceeded, independently
, back to our pen. There I
took my trunks out of the small suitcase I'd brought with me.
"Aw, Jesus," said Mick, "I haven't got any togs." "Hire some down there," I sugg
ested. Mick shook his head.
"Can't," he explained, "got no dough."
"That's all right," I told him-- "I've got twelve bob. That should see us throug
h. Come on, let's go." For a
second Mick looked quite embarrassed at this offer, and then grinned a completel
y toothless grin.
"You got a mate with you?" he queried. I said I hadn't.
"What say we stick together then?" he suggested. I said I thought it was a good
idea.
"Right," concluded Mick, "let's go for a swim."
We waited only long enough to discuss what we should do with our toilet gear and
spare clothes, finally
deciding to leave them all together in my bag in the pen, and headed out of the
barracks.
"Leave pass?" demanded the guard at the gate.
"Don't be bloody ridiculous," Mick told him, his expression outraged at this lib
erty, and off we sailed to
Bondi.
After the last of the day's sun, we returned penniless and happy to the barracks
. There the earlier problem of
where we should stow our gear we found had been settled forever. Someone had sto
len the lot, suitcase and
all. Also the possibility of our sticking together was abruptly disposed of by t
he sergeant, who slouched over
and asked: "You Braddon?" and, when I nodded, said, "Well, report to the office:
you've been requisitioned by
the artillery."
"What about Mick?" I demanded.
"Never 'eard of him," replied the sergeant. "Who's Mick?"
I pointed at the ex-milkman said, "This bloke."
"Miserable little runt, aren't you?" observed the sergeant, looking up and down.

"Least I can see me boots over me guts," replied Mick with spirit.
"Now cut that out, mate," rebuked our warrior of the orderly room, "you just git
down to the cookhouse
double smart or you'll find yourself on a charge. And you, Braddon, you report t
o the office." He thrust his
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
stomach out an extra foot to emphasize both his point and his authority.
For a moment Mick glared mutinously. Then he shrugged. "Better do what the basta
rd says," he concluded.
He held out his hand and said, "Good-bye, mate, don't do anything I wouldn't do,
" and, having shaken hands,
off he went. With a final defiant tug at the white belt, the short, small-waiste
d figure with its brown pants and
green shirt vanished out of the doorway. It was the last time I ever saw him.
Feeling quite forlorn, I made my way to the office to investigate this "requisit
ion." Maybe now, I thought, I'll
do something about the Germans.
At the office I found four other men who had alsoone gathered from their comment
s been requisitioned to the
artillery. Three of them were as young as myself, the fourth was a man of about
fifty who had, he said, given
his age as thirty-five. He had been a sergeant in the 1914-18 war; he seriously
considered that nothing had
really happened since the Battle of Passchendaele; and he couldn't get into this
war quickly enough. These
veterans of 1914 who were rejoining in 1940 were known as Ratty Diggers "ratty"
because it was thought by
Australia's disrespectful youth that, having survived one war, they should have
had enough sense to avoid
another.
"Your name Braddon?" the Ratty Digger asked me, and when I admitted that it was,
he announced,
"Braddon's here now, sir,' and a major at a desk looked profoundly bored at this
piece of information, whilst
the ex-sergeant stood rigidly at attention like a dog pointing.
"Shall I take charge, sir?" asked the Ratty Digger eagerly. With weary indiffere
nce the major nodded.
Thereupon we were issued with ten pounds of butter and eating-irons and bundled
into a truck which, with
frenzied speed, was driven out to one of Sydney's race courses. This, we were in
formed, it was our duty, as
artillerymen, to guard.
For five days we lived in a tent on the racecourse, which was high with rank gra
ss and covered with
mushrooms. Then, at the end of the fifth day, when we had received no stores, no
arms and no order of any
kind from the Army: when the Ratty Digger, relying upon his status as a 1918 vin
tage sergeant, had assumed
all the airs and graces of a full-blown colonel and become quite intolerable: wh
en all the mushrooms on the
racecourse had been fried in our ten pounds of butter and consumed: and, finally
, when no enemy had made
even the smallest attempt to seize the racecourse, which we had been determined
to defend to the death, if
necessary, with our knives and forks then we grew very mutinous and rang up the
major at Victoria Barracks.
He seemed most surprised to hear my voice and asked where we were. I told him th
e racecourse. Still more
surprised, he said what were we doing there: so I told him guarding it. He asked
what with, so I told him,
"Knives and forks and a Ratty Digger," and he said, Now, now, soldier, enough of
that I'll send a truck for
you,' and rang off without even saying good-bye.
Quite soon the truck arrived and we returned to Victoria Barracks, There we were
equipped with uniforms that
didn't fit and boots that didn't bend and two pairs each of the most obscene-loo
king long woollen underpants.
So ended my first military operation against the Germans.
As soon as the ungracious business of the kit issue had been concluded, we were
ordered to proceed to Central
Station, report to the R.T.O. and catch a train to Liverpool. None of us had the
smallest idea what this R.T.O.
was except the Ratty Digger. He wasn't going to tell us unless we asked him, and
we had no intention of
gratifying him by asking. Swinging packs onto shoulders, we prepared to depart.
Then at the last moment--to our unqualified joy--the Ratty Digger was withdrawn
from the party. The
remaining four of us made our way alone and with great nonchalance to Central. T
here, adopting a tone of
complete familiarity, I demanded the R.T.O. It was only with difficulty that I c
oncealed my surprise when the
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
R.T.O. turned out to be merely a nondescript little man with some pips on his sh
oulders who gave you railway
tickets if you had enough forms signed by sufficient people.
Armed with the little man's tickets, we boarded the electric train to Liverpool
and arrived there forty-five
minutes later. We found the town swarming with both militiamen and Free French t
roops and with ladies
anxious to pick up either but no one at all con cerned with us. We were, by that
time, however, developing
considerable initiative in these matters. We knew that we had to get to the camp
of the 215th Field Regiment
at Holdsworthy. We therefore walked the town till we found one of the regiment's
trucks and then clambered
aboard. We sat in it for an hour till its crew returned, then we drove out with
them to Holdsworthy, having
refused to be evicted by them.
In a surprisingly short time, although no one in the regiment had expected us or
been warned of our arrival,
we were given a meal (in which good Australian beef had miraculously been transf
ormed into the most
noisome stew), a cup of hot cocoa, a palliasse on which to lie, and a tent in wh
ich to sleep. For the first time I
felt that I was really in the Army and wondered what the subsequent days of trai
ning would bring.
Very quickly I found out. They brought weeks of rookie training from an N.C.O. w
hose knowledge of
textbook soldiering was as intimate as his language was bawdy. There were endles
s lectures on the art of
stripping down both rifles and machine guns. The same N.C.O. could strip and rem
ount a Lewis machine gun
blindfold and with heavy gloves on. He could also play the piano blindfold and w
ith heavy gloves on. He
would do either at the drop of a hat and of the two operations he was proudest o
f the latter, though the former
was infinitely the more artistic.
The weeks drew on. At the behest each dawn of a redheaded sergeant major whom I
detested, I peeled about
one million pounds of potatoes and disposed of about one million gallons of urin
e which was collected in
latrine pans outside each hut each night and was especially prolific on beer nig
hts.
I got lumps under my arms from my vaccination and lumps in the groin from my ino
culations, I learnt that a
Short Arm Parade had nothing to do with small arms, side arms or shouldering arm
s and that, at its best, it
could only be described as Presenting Arms. I learnt how to hook up all the piec
es of webbing with which we
had been issued till they formed the one uncomfortable harness, and I learnt how
to crawl out the back fence
of the camp so that I could go absent without leave till my pay expired under th
e strain.
I heard sufficient foul language in five days to deter me from ever using anythi
ng but the King's English for
the next five years (though not enough to blind me to the fact that on occasions
the Australian uses his
"bloodies" and "bastards" with a rhythmic grace of which I in my more orthodox s
tyle could never be
capable). I absorbed the principles and practice of field gunnery almost with pl
easure, although I never ceased
to be irritated by the instructor's maxim (which he repeated with infantile plea
sure) that "A gunner doesn't
walk; he doesn't run; he FLIES," And I never learnt to salute officers whom I re
garded as dopes with the
smallest degree of conviction. Moreover one day I was paid. The possibility of b
eing paid in the Army had
frankly never occurred to me. Five shillings a day it was. I was most surprised.

Finally I learnt to keep quite level an eyebrow which had a deplorable tendency
to rise most noticeably
whenever I observed any of the innumerable follies of Army administration and wh
ich had already, after only
two months service, earned me three charges for "dumb insolence."
The last of these occasions had been when a gun crew, of which I was a member, p
ractised gun drill round a
non-existent gun. We wound imaginary elevating gear: levelled imaginary clinomet
res: hunched imaginary
shells into imaginary breeches taking care (by clenching one's fist) that one's
fingers were not amputated by
the slamming of imaginary breech blocks. All this we had done with the most admi
rable composure, although
I had never been good at this playing at soldiers.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Then we were ordered by the "gun's" officer to drag our imaginary gun with imagi
nary dragropes. Still our
composure was beyond reproof. Next we were ordered to coil our imaginary dragrop
es, hang them on the
front of the imaginary gun shield, hook up our non-existent gun and ammunition l
imber to our non-existent
tractor and leap aboard with drilled precision onto the non-existent tractor's n
on-existent seats.
All this we did with the external composure and ardour of lunatics playing their
demented games. Six men in
the middle of an empty parade ground stood resting their bottoms on nothing as i
f convinced that they were
seated in a 30-hundredweight truck, to which was attached a Mark IV eighteen-pou
nder and its limber not a
trace of derision on any one face.
Then it happened. The officer, obsessed with the excitement of this exhilarating
manoeuvre, screamed at us;
"Sit at attention there. When you mount your tractor you sit at attention!" and
up shot my eye brow. In that
non-existent truck with its six petrified passengers, the only thing that moved
was my eyebrow and
immediately I was on a charge. Same old thing. Dumb insolence. I resolved thence
forward to keep the
offending feature horizontal.
And having thus acquired both a knowledge of gun drill and a sense of discipline
, I was transferred into
Battery Headquarters to learn the more precise art of ranging the guns onto thei
r targets.
I moved into a galvanized iron hut which, in those winter months, was so freezin
g at night that its occupants
fairly refrigerated. Requests for extra blankets were met with the restatement o
f a summertime regulation,
which limited blanket issues to three. Our quartermaster sergeant devoted his en
tire life to the cause of issuing
nothing if possible and as little as he decently could if it were not. Consequen
tly, we got no extra bedding
from him and everyone retired to sleep at nights dressed in every single article
of his clothing issue, not
excluding the two pairs of obscene-looking long woollen underpants.
I soon came to like most of the men in the hut. They were an assorted bunch, cer
tainly, but likable. Four of
them had enlisted together (with yet a fifth, who, being a sergeant, dwelt elsew
here) from an accountants firm
Piddington, Magee, Shackle, Robinson. Of them only Piddington was to survive. Ma
gee and Robinson died in
Thailand on the Japanese railway, Shackle died on the Sandakan March in Borneo.
Then there were the two
Icetons, Johnny and Bluey, who was called Bluey, in the Australian fashion, beca
use he had red hair. They
had not known each other before their Army days and had met in the regiment quit
e by chance. They became
inseparable friends. Johnny was to be killed at Parit Sulong: Bluey lost an arm
in an action the day before,
Wimpey, who slept opposite me, was small and quiet and never washed. Ponchard, h
is mate, was seldom in
camp, being more or less permanently A.W.O.L. This tendency he was unable to cur
b even in Thailand when
in 1943 I saw him wandering in the jungle, apparently mad and miles from his own
camp.
Ronnie Welsh, stocky, dark-haired, played a delightful game of football and in b
attle proved that he had no
fear and had never known it. He was a bombardier and a man whom I respected whol
e heartedly. His fellow
bombardier, Rosenberg (a solicitor of nearly forty), was a pleasant soul with a
passion for slide-rule
computations--which took him hours--and for shaving with a cut-throat razor and
no mirror which he did in a
matter of seconds. He, too, died in Thailand.
Hugh Moore, who had been at the university with me, was to share in many of the
unpleasant events which
subsequently befell me, Clift, though a gunnery officer of the 1914 war and the
only man in the regiment who
combined a fluent knowledge of the Malayan language with a high speed on the mor
se key, was to languish as
a gunner (his talents quite wasted) for the duration.
These were the men whose company I was to share for the next few months. They we
re friendly and generous
to an incredible degree.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
There were, of course, others whose names now escape me others, like the two fri
ends who, whenever the
price of rabbit skins became high, gave up soldiering for weeks on end while the
y trapped rabbits instead.
Rabbit trapping had been their civilian occupation. Theirs was an economic delin
quency, not one of
discipline--they could not resist high prices for rabbit skins! The C.O. treated
them with understanding,
knowing that as soon as prices dropped they would be back, amiable and conscient
ious as ever.
Finally, there were the drivers always grumbling: always in trouble: and always
ready to lend a hand (after a
reasonable period of protesting) in any difficulty.
Thus, for months we trained. The regiment had been formed for fifteen months and
had become extremely
efficient. It wanted now to put its efficiency to some purpose overseas. For mon
ths more nothing happened.
But in July the regiment was given its final embarkation leave and everyone went
home to say good-bye
before departing overseas for the serious business of war*
My own farewells turned out to be completely unsatisfactory. Having determined t
o have no fuss, and my
family having determined like wise, no one mentioned the subject of my impending
departure until the actual
second when I left. Then, with everything unsaid, I found myself kissing my moth
er good-bye in the garage,
both of us in capable of speech, whilst the dog rushed round and rouud, barking
hysterically and asking for its
ball to be thrown.
I got into the family car a cantankerous little brute known as the Bug, whose re
liability had been in no way
increased by the occasion when my stepfather had involved it in an argument with
a petrol wagon and drove
off. As I ran down the hill, I saw my mother staring after me, dry-eyed and smil
ing hard no doubt pondering
deeply on this absurd culmination to twenty years of parental devotion. For my p
art, I was neither dry-eyed
nor smiling and had, at the bottom of the hill, to halt the Bug for five minutes
lest I added a tram to my
stepfather's toll of petrol wagons. Then I drove to my stepfather's office and h
e drove me on to Brisbane
interstate station, where the leave train waited. Tactfully he talked in quiet t
ones all the way and never once
looked at me.
When we parted on the station, he said, "Your young sister's waiting to wave as
you go past her school. Don't
miss her," I nodded. "And don't worry about your mother,' he added, "I'll look a
fter her." I could have kissed
him. Instead I nodded mutely again, shook his hand and clambered into the train.

Every compartment was full except one, in which sat five sailors. Taking the las
t seat near the corridor, I
joined the Navy. Almost at once the train started and I began peering across two
sailors and out the far
windows, looking for my sister's school.
The sailor at the outside window looked at me curiously for a few seconds.
"Expecting to see someone, Dig?" he asked. I told him: "Yes, my young sister."
"Better sit here," he suggested, and as I moved over he Jogged his neighbour alr
eady fast asleep in the best
nautical manner and said, "Move up, Nobby," so Nobby moved into my seat, where h
e at once fell asleep
again, and the sailor moved into Nobby's seat and watched me with unconcealed in
terest. I stared out at the
embankments flashing by.
Far sooner than I had expected, the school came into sight. There was Pat, wavin
g furiously, and along with
her most of the schoolalso waving. Then they were gone as the train, with a spee
d most unwarranted for the
Queensland Railways, thundered on. I gulped heavily. The sailor looked at me sym
pathetically and broke an
awk ward silence by commenting, "Pretty good roll up that. Thousands of Sheilas
waving you good-bye.
What you got that I haven't got?"
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Feeling rather less desolate, I hastened to reassure him. "Nothing, Jack," I tol
d him, "they couldn't have
known the fleet was in!"
The rest of the twenty-four-hour trip to Sydney was spent in that state of acute
discomfort which the
authorities deliberately contrive for all troop trains, so that their passengers
will be delighted finally to get
back to their camps. For the whole time, the Navy proved themselves excellent co
mpany and with the
conspicuous exception of Nobby, who slept an unbroken sleep in the luggage rack
com pletely belied their
reputation as "The Silent Service." We parted at Central Station, Sydney, and I
returned to camp.
For the first time after any leave it was found that no one was A.W.O.L. Only fi
nal leave could have achieved
that miracle with the A.I.F.
A week later, a week of intense security during which no one was allowed to leav
e the camp the Army's
method of preventing spies from getting any informationwe "embussed." This hideo
us word was the invention
of some military genius and meant simply that we got aboard trucks a procedure f
or which we had rehearsed
most assiduously during the entire previous seven days, it being deemed by offic
ialdom a difficult one.
Having "embussed" we travelled the few miles to Liverpool rail way station. Ther
e we "debussed? and
"entrained" The train then chugged erratically down to Darling Harbour, where we
"detrained" and
"embarked" Except for the technical terms involved and the amount of baggage to
be carried at each change,
the entire operation proceeded with a smoothness which, for the Army, was quite
startling. Everyone got
aboard and no spies had observed us embussing, or debussing, entraining or detra
ining, nor even embarking.
Everything had been done with a maximum of secrecy.
Thus it was that, still shrouded in security, we stole furtively down Sydney Har
bour towards the Heads
accompanied by no fewer than a hundred small craft bearing friends and relatives
and large placards with
"Good luck, Bill Smith, of the 2,'15th" or "Whacko Bluey of the 2,'29th" or "Bon
Voyage 8th Div. A.LF." the
navigators and passengers of these small craft having presumably obtained their
extremely accurate
information by crystal gazing. We knew, of course, that all the spies in Austral
ia were both unobservant and
unintelligent, so, without any anxiety, we waved wildly to our friends below in
their yachts, launches, rowing
boats and canoes, and steamed slowly out to sea.
As the last of the accompanying launches began to fall away, the whole ship brok
e out into "The Maoris*
Farewell" traditional song of Australians departing their country. Several thous
and voices caught up the
melody: voices in the small craft joined them: voices from the foreshores joined
in again. With the sun behind
us, behind our celebrated Harbour Bridge, we passed out of Sydney Harbourit was
a moving scene. The 8th
Division were off to the wars.
5 "BAD DAMES"
The voyage from Sydney, on the east coast of Australia, to Fremantle, on the wes
t, was uneventful except for
the unfriendly state of the sea in the Great Australian Bight. Black, arctic wat
ers raged at us and no one was
very happy. Some, in fact, like Bombardier Rosenberg of the slide-rule computati
ons and the mirrorless
shaving, laid themselves down to die. Indeed, Rosie's case was the cause of acut
e amusement to all except
Rosie, because with typical caution and forethought he had equipped himself with
anti-seasickness pills
sufficient for months of travelling. Observing some small waves just out of Sydn
ey's Heads, however, his
nerve had failed him and he had devoured the lot before we had even turned the b
ottom of Australia. Devoid
of both pills and nourishment, utterly without hope, he abandoned himself to the
sea and his Maker and
longed for death.
Instead of death, however, came Fremantie sunny and vastly hospitable. At once e
veryone, even Rosie,
revived and went ashore for a last night out on Australian soil. The cause of "s
ecurity" was greatly enhanced
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
by a flood of telephone calls, telegrams and letters from western Australia acro
ss to the Eastern States, telling
everyone who cared to listen that the Eighth Division was on its way to the Midd
le East, to Darwin, to
Malaya, to Cape Town, even to England. One could only feel acute sympathy for th
e spies who listened
everyone was making categorical statements about our destination, statements whi
ch grew steadily more
vehement as the intake of Swan beer increased, and no two statements ever seemed
to agree.
The wiser ones, however, pointed out, with considerable logic, that in the holds
of our ships were vehicles;
and that those vehicles were all painted bright yellow; and that bright yellow w
as a natural camouflage in
desert. By morning, when the entire division had transshipped into three Dutch v
essels, this view had
prevailed over all others and everyone wrote off urgent letters cancelling all p
revious orders to those at home
and assuring them that we were destined for the Middle East. One hopes profoundl
y that the spies steamed
open and read all these letters because, of course, we at once departed from Aus
tralia complete with our bright
yellow trucks and headed for the dark green jungles of Malaya.
The Dutch vessels were not nice. I cannot remember which deck it was on our part
icular ship to which we
were consigned, but, working on the principle that decks are lettered alphabetic
ally and that the one farthest
from the keel is A, I should say that we were on about Z+3,
Certainly we crawled down multitudinous steps into the bowels of this abominable
boat until eventually there
were no more steps to descend, and on our left we observed the galleys, whilst,
on our right, low-roofed and
reeking with the fumes of cooking and diesel oil, we observed our quarters. Thes
e contained rows of wooden
benches at which one ate: two feet above them rows of hammocks in which one slep
t: adjoining them a large
Dutch lavatory, and a small Dutch bathroom, outside which one queued interminabl
y.
Confronted with these appalling facilties for bathing, only Wimpey, Who never wa
shed at all, remained
unmoved. Not even the unconscious humour of the Dutch notice on the bathroom a n
otice which, in letters of
gold, announced that the bathroom was for "Bad Dames" not even this could disgui
se the fact that it was a
very small and inadequate bathroom. When, on inspection, it was discovered to be
not only small and
inadequate, but also totally devoid of the advertised bad dames, comment became
very un favourable indeed.
Worse, however, was to come. The lavatories were equipped with a quaint continen
tal device called a
sanitaire douche. This was a jet of water which dealt the unwary occupant a fien
dish blast in the bottom when
he succumbed ( as we all succumbed) to the temptation of pressing a button which
seemed to protrude from
the marble wall for no apparent reason. This provided us in the first hour of ou
r voyage with much ribald
amusement. But when, after an hour, it was discovered that Dutch plumbing did no
t cater for toilet paper but
only for the sanitaire douche, and when, as a result, the entire system had chok
ed and our Z+3 deck had
become some ten inches deep in the overflow then even Wimpey became vociferous.
That night no one on Z+3 had the smallest intention of attempting sleep in an at
mosphere redolent with the
ship's cooking, the ship's engines and the ship's sewage. In spite of fierce ord
ers that every man must stay
below, all of us made our way stolidly up the multitudinous steps for the starli
t freshness of an open deck at
sea.
Admittedly, this deck was prominently labelled "Out of Bounds: For Officers Only
," but that matter was
simply solved by removing the offending sign and casting it with a phosphorescen
t plop into the Indian
Ocean. Thereupon, hundreds of men proceeded quietly and contently to bed themsel
ves down.
Not for long, however, was there quiet. The orderly officer, outraged by this vi
olation of the sanctity of the
vacant deck which was for officers only, came storming round demanding that we s
hould return at once
("forthwith" was the word he used) to Z+3.
From all sides rose a bedlam of abuse. "Go away, you silly bas tard..." "Get bac
k to your mess, you great
galah..." "Drongo ..." "Stop your noise, I'm trying to get to sleep.* With great
spirit and complete unanimity
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
three or four hundred men spoke their minds and this was something which the off
icer was not prepared to
tolerate. Switching on his torch, he aimed it in the direction of the most outsp
oken group and said to his
sergeant: "Take their names." But there were to be no names taken that night. Th
e ship was under full
blackout orders. Not even the silliest private on that deck would have lit so mu
ch as a cigarette. It had
remained for the orderly officer to turn on a powerful torch.
A lean figure pounced on the offending light. Amid a roar of "Douse that bloody
torch," it was hurled away,
and a faint splash indicated that it had joined the "Out of Bounds" notice. Then
the lean figure spoke to the
orderly officer most earnestly: "Get out, you mug," he said, "or you'll go over
after your torch." Three sec
onds later the deck was inhabited by Other Ranks only, so, without further comme
nt, we settled ourselves
down to sleep.
But even as we did there came a second interruption. A clatter of boots on the s
tairs intruded upon the
peaceful quiet. Steadily it plodded up towards the deck. Up and up, hundreds of
stairs. And then, at last, a
head appeared rising slowly and deliberately out of the stair well. Rosie! After
hours of calculations doubtless
on his slide rule Rosie had decided that Z+3 was a social, physical and mathemat
ical impossibility. He was
now going to join us on "Officers Only." On the second stair from the top he hal
ted, surveying the cool
darkness outside with evident satisfaction. It was exactly as he had planned. Th
ings were always as Rosie
planned. Then came the unplanned... as he moved to step forward his hobnailed bo
ot slipped on the brassed
edge of the top stair and abruptly, delight fully, he plunged precipitously back
wards and out of sight.
To the accompaniment of maniacal peals of laughter from all sides, he crashed do
wn the. stairs his progress
marked by the wild clatter of eating-irons, slide rules, seasick pills, razors a
nd water bottles (for Rosie went
nowhere unprepared and was constantly aware of the possibility of our ship being
sunk), Then suddenly, as
we laughed, we became aware of the fact that below the clatter had ceased and th
ere was only silence.
Instantly all laughter stopped. Someone said, "Christ, he's killed himself," and
then silence silence of the kind
that is usually termed "pregnant" fell again.
And from this silence, deep down from the reeking entrails of that horrible vess
el, rose the cultured tones of
the ex-solicitor who was now a bombardier. Rosie expressed the sentiments of us
all. With awful clarity and a
legal precision, he intoned his verdict. "You bloody bastard," he said, "you blo
ody bastard of a bloody Dutch
bloody ship." Rosie was a man not much given either to bad language or to violen
t emotion: yet seldom was I
to hear the great Australian adjective and the great Australian noun combined wi
th such lyrical and irresistible
effect.
And so we steamed steadily northwards: the weather grew steadily warmer: the foo
d steadily fouler: our
sleeping up on deck more and more of a fait accompli. But the daytime was the ti
me during which the Army
enjoyed itself most.
It organized us into long sessions of physical training to which no one objected
particularly there always being
a sneaking suspicion at the back of one's mind that, somehow, sometime, P.T. mig
ht do one some good but
the periods of drill on three-inch mortars that followed the P.T. yvere regarded
by artillerymen (trained for
fifteen months on eighteen-pounders ) with a vague distrust: whilst the long lec
tures (delivered to us by the
redheaded sergeant major, who at Holdsworthy had specialized in detailing latrin
e duties) on the horrors of
tropical diseases were openly disliked.
The redheaded sergeant major had once been in Darwin and consequently regarded h
imself as an ultimate
authority on all tropi cal complaints from malaria to schistosomiasis. Tinea, ho
wever, was his forte. On tinea
he could and did wax lyrical for hours on end. Tinea, he told us, crept! All ove
r you. Awful it was. And conse
quently we were all paraded one day to have our feet examined for tinea. The sma
llest crack in the skin
between one's toes was regarded with manifest horror and one was at once consign
ed to the lepers* queue for
treatment before it crept.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The queue was cunningly held in a narrow alley in the hottest part of the ship s
o that having waited one's turn
for several hoursone would then know better than to have cracks between one's to
es in the next war. When at
last one did reach the head of the queue, one's toe (the offending digit) was pa
inted liberally with a bright
green paint which stung considerably but had not the least effect on the crack.
This continued for four days
until everyone lost interest in tinea, including the redheaded sergeant major.
Mortar drill, however, continued with unabated fury and the fact that we were le
aving home waters was
brought home even more forcibly to us when one day, in the midst of this drill,
a shout went up from the
submarine lookout of "flying fish," Having never seen a flying fish, and being n
aively excited at the prospect,
I at once abandoned the mortars and rushed to the side of the ship. Awful disill
usionment! These flying fish,
which I had always understood to be exotic kaleidoscopic monsters some six feet
long, which winged their
way vigorously through portholes so that they landed, colourful and flapping, on
one's bunk these flying fish
turned out to be colourless, graceless and quite unexciting. About nine or ten i
nches long with transparent
wings, they skimmed, like a cross between a grasshopper and a herring, with pede
strian stolidity from wave to
wave. Quite sad, I returned from the ship's rail to the exhilarating occupation
of pretending to drop mortar
bombs down the spout of a mortar and hurriedly slamming back over its muzzle a l
eather cover to prevent the
inside of this dreary piece of ironmongery being exposed to tfye sea air and con
sequently going rusty.
And thus the days of P.T P , medical parades, kit inspections and mortar drill f
ollowed one another days
which, in spite of the Army's attempts to keep us occupied, managed nevertheless
to be exciting because
ahead lay uncertainty.
As we steamed closer to the equator, the conversation reverted more and more fre
quently to the possibility of
Japan's entering the war (because, as soldiers in Malaya, our only opportunity o
f seeing active service would
be against a Japanese invader).
Rosie dealt our hopes a rather devastating blow. With all the dogmatism of the c
onfirmed bachelor in his late
thirties (not to mention the stubborn Jew and the successful lawyer), Rosie de c
lared: "Of course, Japan won't
come into the war. Why should she when she can stay out and make a profit from b
oth sides like the Turks
and the Spaniards?"
And Rosie was an intelligent and well-informed man, too, one had to recognize th
at. And even if the Japanese
were reckless enough to disregard Rosie's opinion, a war with Nippon gave no ind
ication of being very
exciting, if one listened to what the intelli gence officer said in his lectures
. Apparently the Japanese were
very small and very myopic and thus totally unsuited either physically or optica
lly to tropical warfare. Nor
was this all. They had aero planes made from old kettles and kitchen utensils, g
uns salvaged from the war
against Russia in 1905 and rifles of the kind used by civilized peoples only in
films about the Red Indians.
Also, they were frightened of the dark.
Regretfully we resigned ourselves to a war without battles where our sole functi
on was to guard the Empire's
greatest source of tin and rubber. Meantime the floating septic tank which was b
oth the pride of the Dutch
merchant marine and our transport made its way steadily towards Singapore throug
h the incredible beauties of
the Sunda Strait soon to be the graveyard of the gallant handful of Dutch, Ameri
can and Australian vessels of
war who flung themselves at the throat of a Japanese fleet
Singapore, I was surprised to find, when I looked at a map, was a small diamond-
shaped island at the bottom
of a leg called Malaya. Sprawling sideways beneath it were Sumatra, Java, Timor
and New Guinea the four
joined in a long chain by innumerable smaller islands. And New Guinea, at the ea
stern end of the chain, sat
square on the northernmost tip of Australia.
Even to my completely non-military mind, it seemed most ad visable that Malaya (
at the Asiatic end of this
chain which contained most of the world's rubber and tin, and much of its tea, q
uinine and oil; and which led
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
directly to Australia) should be securely held.
One felt relieved to hear that the key point of Malaya was that small diamond-sh
aped island which was
universally known as the impregnable fortress of Singapore.
6 "HOW TO LIVE IN MALAYA"
Into this impregnable fortress we steamed early one morning. It was August 15. F
our years later to the very
daythe war in the Pacific was to end. Very few of the two infantry battalions an
d the regiment of artillery who
waited on the steaming decks that August 15 were to see this fourth anniversary
of their arrival in Singapore.
Two thirds of them were to die in a last-ditch battle on the west coast of Malay
a: of the remainder, many were
to fall under the scythe of cholera on the Thailand railway.
But, for the moment, all this lay in the future, and so we stood, young and full
of hope and unaware, on the
decks of our three transports. "Stood" is a magnificently inadequate word for an
Army operation which had
commenced in the early hours of the morning (when, carrying all our equipment an
d wearing rolled greatcoats
round our necks in a horse collar of incandescence, we were f alien-in in a tigh
t-packed, sweating parade),
and, at noon, still continued. By then it had become a sweating, tight-packed, b
ad-tempered parade. A few of
the more cunning ones had flopped to the deck in a feigned faint and were carrie
d to the spaciousness below:
the rest of us stood up there, sullen, but far from silent.
Then, at noon, the order to Disembark was given and we filed off the ship in a l
ong khaki column. Filed down
towards wharves seething with native labourers who managed, with a maximum of sh
outing and gesticulation,
to do a minimum of work which, in that heat (to us almost overwhelming), we coul
dn't help but think most
sensible*
Once ashore, and away from such fearful non-military contraptions as steamships,
normal routine reasserted
itself and, with great speed, we clambered aboard waiting lorries. About such na
utical matters as coming
down a gangway, the Army becomes deeply perplexed: but, given a lorry, it knows
exactly what to do. And so
we boarded our trucks and sped off through the city of Singapore.
Driving through Singapore for the first time was an experience. There were the v
ivid colours of tropical
flowers in parks: the in credible stenches of fish drying on the pavements each
fragrant morsel the target of a
million flies: the bamboo poles slung out from each side of the street, on which
was suspended much native
washing rather indifferently laundered: and in the streets, everywhere, contempt
uous of death and traffic laws
alike, a bedlam of fowls, rickshaws and natives, through which all vehicles care
ered as fast as possible.
Turning right, we sped into a less chaotic thoroughfare and were touched (though
surprised, since our journey
had been so secret) to observe, slung from one side of it to the other, a huge b
anner bearing the words,
"Welcome to the A.I.F." Our driver, a youthful English private, grinned.
What's the joke?" we asked. He pointed down the road over which the banner hung.

"That's Lavender Street," he told us. Not finding this enigmatic remark either p
articularly humorous or
informative, we dropped the subject. It was a week before we discovered that Lav
ender Street is one of the
world's most notorious streets of brothels. Obviously, our security had been as
superb as the reputation which
went before us was high!
We were deposited a few miles out of Singapore City near some very substantial-l
ooking English barracks.
Immediately God indi cated His extreme displeasure at our arrival in Neesoon by
deluging us in a fierce
downpour of lukewarm rain. Carrying our mountainous kit bags and still wearing o
ur horse collars of rolled
greatcoats, we staggered through mud and rain to our new camp. It stood on the s
ide of a hill in a rubber
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
plantation. Rows of tents. And through the tents cascaded a torrent of brown wat
er draining off the slope.
Drenched and enervated, we made our way to the tents four men to each one deposi
ted our gear inside and,
stripping off, at once commenced digging drains round our new home. Immediately
the rain stopped: the sun
blazed: the earth steamed and the orderly officer arrived.
This gentleman had been thoroughly coached in the art of avoiding malaria and, i
n accordance with his vast
knowledge on the subject, at once ordered us all to redon our shirts, roll down
our sleeves and tuck our pants
into our socks. Thus, he said, the malarial mosquito would find no flesh exposed
into which to sink his
infested fangs. Apparently the malarial mosquito and the military authorities ha
d arrived at an agreement
whereby for the purpose of biting the neck, face and wrists were, to all anophel
es, strictly out of bounds. For
the next ninety minutes we dug in vicious tropical sunshine, dad as no one else
in the whole of Malaya was
clad at that hour.
By nightfall we were delighted to crawl on to the native-style beds (wooden fram
es with a webbing of fibre
cords to support one the whole thing revelling in the name "charpoy"), with whic
h we had been issued. Under
our nets we listened to the peevish buzz of mosquitoes and the curious insect no
ises of the rubber plantation.
A moon came out so brilliantly that under it the guy ropes cast clear-cut shadow
s and one could easily read
one's Malayan-English dictionary. And so, having observed idly that "come" was "
mari" and that "go" was
"pigi," I fell asleep-our first night's sleep with the "A.LF. Abroad."
Next morning we were swiftly initiated into a new way of life. We were told that
, heat being a constant factor
in the tropics, greatcoats were no longer necessary (a fact of which we had ours
elves been acutely conscious
for at least twenty-four hours) and accordingly these were exchanged for a compl
etely useless garment called
a "slicker." This was a crescent-shaped waterproof which, when draped as it was
intended to be draped,
contrived to make the wearer sweat like a pig, whilst, at the same time, letting
in all the rain.
Next we were told that the soil of Malaya was infested with hookworm; that this
hookworm was ubiquitous;
that it entered the body through the soles of the feet and worked its way remors
elessly round one's blood
stream into one's bowels and that there it became the cause of a "slow lingering
death,' This slow lingering
death instantly befell anyone who so much as set a bare little toe onto the eart
h and was quite incurable.
Prevention was the only cure, we were assured; and, the better to prevent this g
hastly fate, we were thereupon
all issued with wooden clogs on which to clip-dop down to showers and back. And
if anyone asks, "Why not
wear shoes or sand shoes down to the showers and back?" the answer is quite simp
le. Those who wore shoes
all the time got tinea. And tinea as we had learned from the redheaded B.S.M. cr
ept! And when tinea crept one
was almost as badly off as when one had contracted the slow, lingering death. So
the entire regiment hobbled
round most inexpertly on clogs for weeks on end and every man fell off them and
onto the hookworms so
often that at the end of that time it was very surprising to learn that, so far,
no one at all had died.
Next we were issued with sheets unprecedented luxury for Other Ranks. Indeed, th
e officer who arrived to
conduct this issue was heard to remark loudly to the quartermaster sergeant in p
ained sur prise: "What! Sheets
for the gunners ?" and was consequently never called anything else but "What, sh
eets for the gunners" for the
rest of his military career. Nevertheless, in spite of the officer's astonish me
nt, sheets we got and nothing
brought home to us more forcibly than this the fact that now we were in an entir
ely different theatre of war.
Perhaps "nothing" is too strong. The M.O,'s parade, where he informed us that 96
per cent of Malayan women
had V.D., was not without its impact. When he amended his statement two days lat
er to 99.9 per cent, we
were even more impressed.
In spite of this unendearing fact, however, we were instructed at all times to a
ct towards the locals in a
dignified and friendly fashion, so as to win the respect of the Malays. We were,
moreover, to take care not to
offend against any Malayan ethics or codes of behaviour as a demonstration of wh
ich we were at once ordered
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
to parade in the open rubber, naked, for a mass examination for V.D.! Ten yards
away from this parade
(which was not in the least dignified and which flatly contravened the Asiatics
modest aversion even to
bathing in the nude) worked a large party of Tamils, meu and women. As the first
few men, protesting
violently, went through the elegant ritual of the Short Arm Parade, the hundreds
behind them reacted swiftly
to the Tamil women's giggles and menfolk's outraged stares. They jacked upl That
was the last Short Arm
Parade to be held in public in Malaya. One had to learn these points of behaviou
r. We quickly realized that at
the moment no one knew anything, and that lie best thing we could do was to lear
n as we went along.
Meantime, our cooks revelled in this golden opportunity to be really cussed and
prepared us hot meat and
vegetable stew for seventeen consecutive meals by which time no one any longer t
roubled even to collect the
stuff. Accordingly, orders were issued requiring every man to attend meal parade
s. Nothing, however, was
done about the food, the officers of our regiment being just as afraid of the ve
nomous old men who were our
cooks as we were so, with typical British compromise, we attended the parades, d
rew no food, and proceeded
straight from the mess hut to the NAAFI canteen, where we bought fried eggs from
the native staff.
Our growing pains were not yet finished. Clothing still remained a pain in the n
eck to soldiers and authorities
alike. But finally, when the authorities produced a strait-jacket-like coat, whi
ch buttoned tightly up to the
neck, and Bombay bloomers (a hideous garment, neither short nor long, which touc
hed the body nowhere and
de prived the male body of all grace and dignity), the men took matters into the
ir own hands and ordered
tailored slacks, open-neck shirts and shorts from the local natives. These were
delivered almost on the same
day and the A.I.F, at once became as immaculate and impeccably dressed a body of
men as ever stepped out
on leave.
Leave itself was the cause of some trouble in those days. The Argylls had held u
ndisputed sway in Singapore
for many years and delivered an uncompromising note to all Australians, advising
them not to encroach on
Scottish territory in other words: "Keep out of Singapore, or else... I" That, o
f course, was all that was
required. On the first available leave day every free Australian on the island w
ent into the city. There they
were met by every free Argyll, and great and bloody were the battles until the p
rovosts arrived, where upon
both sides, furious at this gratuitous display of officious inter vention, cease
d battle and fell upon the common
foe. Thus round the Great World and the Happy World and the main streets of Sing
a pore did the volunteers
from the Dominions first join hands with the professional soldiers from the Home
land.
Establishing friendly relationships with the garrison troops from Britain was no
t difficult beer, fights, football
matches and the Union Jack Club soon settled that. But establishing friendly rel
ationships with the trading
civilians and planters from Britain- that turned out to be impossible.
After three weeks in Malaya we had none of us, we ordinary soldiers, spoken to a
white woman (except the
volunteers at the Anzac Club, who only had time to ask, "One lump or two?* as th
ey poured one's tea). To
address a European woman or girl or, in many cases, man anywhere in Singapore (w
hether it was a shop, a
cinema or in the street) was to incur the most calculated snub.
This was something we found impossible to combat and impos sible to understand.
Whilst one expected no
gratitude for having been posted to Malaya, presumably to defend these quaint pe
ople, and whilst one
expected no automatic hospitality (although one was very homesick and greatly lo
nged for it), one
nevertheless did expect civility. And civility was precisely what one did not, a
t any time, from any quarter,
get.
My first sally into Singapore shocked me considerably. Having lost myself most s
uccessfully in the heart of
the city, I turned to the first white people I set eyes on two women, extremely
well dressed; one beautiful, the
other pleasant-faced and asked for directions: "Excuse me, madam," I said, "but
how do I get to the Union
Jack Club? I'm lost!"
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Madame, in fact, mesdames, drew themselves up to their full height: the pleasant
-faced one announced to the
beautiful one in tones of pure vinegar: "Good God, these soldiers are everywhere
let's go to the club for a
drink," and, thereupon, hesitating long enough only to look at me as if I'd been
contemplating rape, both
Beauty and Pleasantry swept off. I remained lost.
To extricate myself, I got into a rickshaw and said, "The Union Jack Club, pleas
e." We jogged for miles and
finally took a familiar right-hand turn. Suddenly I realized where I was--Lavend
er Street, the street of
brothels. It was useless protesting to the rickshaw coolie. It didn't matter whe
re in Singapore you boarded a
rickshaw or where you asked to go they always took you to Lavender Street.
But in this they were not without their wisdom. Practically every reputable hote
l and eating establishment in
Singapore had been put "Out of Bounds to O.R.s," so that Lavender Street was the
solution to most men's
eating problems. The girls were quite reasonable and once one explained that one
wanted food, not a 99.9 per
cent chance of contracting V.D., they left one alone in peace to eat. Neverthele
ss, the enforced company of
other soldiers or taxi girls or prostitutes on all leaves for the next four mont
hs before the Japanese invasion
was not the happiest solution in the world to the problems of lonely troops stat
ioned many thousands of miles
from home. I was not very amused when one day, in the levelling atmosphere of a
gaol into which the
Japanese had thrust us all, I asked an English planter why this vicious policy o
f ignoring and ostracizing the
ordinary soldier had grown up.
"But, my dear good fellow," he said, "with all due respect to yourself -- it was
because you chaps were always
hanging round in the brothels!"
Now that the war is over, one wonders whether Malayan Europeans are not again ju
st as contemptuous of the
garrison troops who protect them as ever they were. In 1941, however, we Austral
ians were not pleased. A
storm of criticism went home in letters and evoked a storm of protests from Aust
ralia to family friends who
were civilians in Malaya which, in their turn, evoked hundreds of offers of hosp
itality to the fortunate few.
And, once properly accredited and introduced, very lavish was the hospitality ex
tended to these few. But to
the many, who had no family or business contacts with Europeans in Malaya, the b
an remained most
especially on the British troops who (having been there longer and having less p
ay) deserved it least.
For my part, I received, from friends of my mother's, four invitations to go at
any time to various estates on
the mainland. From my grandmother I received two letters of introduction one to
the governor of Singapore
(this I considered hardly suitable, so I gave it to a rickshaw boy in the fond h
ope that he would use it) and
another to the daughter of one of her greatest friends. This woman, my grandmoth
er told me, always dined on
Sundays at Raffles. "Go to Raffles and send this note in to her," the letter sai
d, "but don't go by taxi because
the native taxi drivers are Muslims and not afraid to die."
How well my grandmama knew Malayan taxi drivers. So I took a rickshaw on my last
Sunday leave in
Singapore we were due to go upcountry the next weekand said firmly, "Raffles." A
nd when I observed the
boy, even more firmly, to be trotting off in the direction of Lavender Street, I
leaped out of his rickshaw and,
standing in front of him, bellowed: "Ptgi, Raffles [Go to Raffles]." And as I cl
imbed back into the seat, I
added a thunderous: "Lacas [quickly] !" Astounded at my fluent command of the la
nguage, and not realizing
that I had thus expended two thirds of my total Malayan vocabulary, the boy meek
ly obeyed. Quite soon we
were there. Having struck a hard bargain and paid the rickshaw off, I cliinbed t
he steps, ignored the "Out of
Bounds" sign and entered the luxurious coolness of Singapore's most expensive ho
tel.
"Sir," the doorkeeper protested, and pointed at the "Out of Bounds" sign.
"Nuts," I told him--it was a word to which he was apparently not accustomed, for
he relapsed into an uneasy
silence whilst I straightened my slacks and saw that my hair was no untidier tha
n usual. This done, I handed
him my grandmother's letter. "Do you know this lady?" I asked, pointing at the a
ddress. "Yes, sir."
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Would you take the letter to her, please, and ask her if she can spare a minute
I'd like to see her if I may."
"Yes, sir," said the door keeperand vanished. After a few minutes, I tired of ha
nging around. I was thirsty and
decided to get a drink. I walked into the lounge, sat down and ordered a long sq
uash. And as I did so, a tall,
fair-haired woman, thirtyish and remarkably good-looking, strolled coolly into t
he room and sat down nearby.
"Boy," she called. The drinks waiter came running. "Tell that soldier," she said
in the clear, ringing tones of
the very rich when talking about the very poor, whom they fondly imagine to be d
eaf, "that he's out of bounds
in here and ask him to leave."
Obediently the "boy" pattered over. "You're out of bounds, sir," he said diffide
ntly.
"Well, that's O.K. by me," I told him.
"But the lady..." protested the boy.
"Tell the lady," I answered rudely, "to go to hell."
The boy pattered back and relayed a mealymouthed version of my original. Promptl
y she reacted. Turning
round to look at me for the first time which she did with unconcealed distaste s
he in structed the boy: "Go
outside and call the Military Police," and then, as the boy was about to leave,
added: "and while you're out
there, bring in the Mr. Braddon who brought this note ask him if he'll have a dr
ink with me in here."
The opportunity was too good to miss. I walked over to her: "I'm Braddon," I sai
d, "and I wouldn't drink here
or anywhere else with you. And when this war with Japan starts and you go screec
hing off on the first
evacuation ship to Australia, I sincerely hope that none of my family will eithe
r."
With that, feeling like Garrick on one of his best exits, I left. At the door sh
e caught me.
"Mr. Braddon," she began.
"Gunner Braddon," I interrupted.
"I'm awfully sorry," she continued, "must you go? Where are you going?
"Lavender Street," I told her, "the Green Cat Down there--the women are bitches
and they know it. I think I
prefer it that way."
At that moment a provost arrived and so I rather precipitately left. Left her to
explain why she'd summoned
him. I just sat in my rickshaw as it headed down past the Great World towards th
e street of brothels and
wondered why wars had to be so unpleasant. It was almost four years later that I
heard that the fair-haired lady
to whom I had carried my letter of introduction in Raffles was drowned when one
of the last evacuee ships left
Singapore Harbour. Apparently she had been very brave. During most of that four
years, of course, Raffles
was a Japanese brothel.
7 "HULLO, JOE"
The next week we moved out of the tented camp in the rubber plantation, off the
island, over the Johore
Causeway which links Singapore to Malaya, and one hundred and fifty miles upcoun
try to a small village
called Tampin. There we were installed in cool, airy, wooden huts: and there we
stayed, very pleasantly, for
almost the rest of the year.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
In this period we painted our bright yellow trucks a sombre shade of jungle gree
n and resigned ourselves to
the indignity of being a mortar regiment instead of a field artillery unit There
being no hope of our receiving
the guns we had been so long trained to use, we settled down grimly to adapt art
illery principles (designed for
ranges up to thirteen thousand yards) to the firepower of three-inch mortars (wh
ose range is six hundred). This
initial disappointment overcome, however, the regiment set to in their task with
violent energy and achieved
as much success in the art of deploying their weapons swiftly and effectively, i
n country mainly composed of
plantations, as the regulations permitted. Led by a vehement Sultan of Johore, v
arious Malayan owners had
succeeded in having imposed a fine of five dollars upon any soldier who in any w
ay damaged any rubber
treehowever slightly and even though it was in the pursuit of his training. Noth
ing could have been more
calculated to interfere with mobility and efficiency (in these predominantly rub
ber-growing areas) than this
regulation. But then one could never accuse the promoters of this regulation of
being at any time the smallest
bit interested in either the mobility or the efficiency of the military forces o
f Malaya.
On the other side of the picture, however,'there was much that was delightful an
d praiseworthy.
We were well paid, well clothed, given sufficient leave in the nearby towns of S
eremban and Malacca, and we
were magnificently healthy a fact which was to save thousands of Australian live
s in the long days of the
captivity to come.
As well as our work there was every encouragement to indulge in sport with the r
esult that I played rugby,
hockey and tennis and swam to my heart's content. Moreover, so thorough were the
precautions taken by our
authorities, and so constant was the stress they placed upon hygiene both person
al and communal that the
dreaded tropical diseases (about which our redheaded sergeant major had spoken s
o luridly) remained just as
unknown to us in Tampin as they had been when he first addressed us. Thus, sick
parades became almost
exclusively the province of those who had hurt themselves playing football or re
ceived stings from Malayan
wasps (which are extremely bad-tempered) or from Malayan vines (which can be tre
acherously deceptive). By
November of 1941 we were a hardened unit, immune to the tropic heat, accustomed
to the strange ways of the
jungle, confident of our own ability to hit hard if the occasion arose. Our only
fears were that the Russian
front would not hold fast for the hundred days which American experts said was t
he minimum Allied
requirement if Germany were not to sweep the world: and that, in the event of ac
tion, our mortar ammunition
might, over the past few months, have been affected by the damp. To dispel the f
irst fear, we ploughed
through endless press and B.B.C. communiques. To avert the second, we moved all
our ammunition from one
place to another, round and round the camp. Taking its temperature, wiping its b
ottom and dusting its top with
all the loving care o a mother with her first child. As events turned out, we ne
ed not have worried about either
the Russians held on for three years and most of the mortar bombs we so jealousl
y saved from the ravages of
moisture were used by the Japanese against our own forces.
Not only in the matter of our health did our authorities excel them selves. They
also encouraged the Australian
troopsalways easy going soulsto make friends with the local inhabitants, the Mal
ays. Thus, in Tampin and
Malacca and Seremban, there were always swarms of children round every Australia
n soldier. Kids who
clamoured for pennies and cigarettes and, when they got them, dutifully took the
money home to mum and
smoked the cigarettes with all the nonchalance of old men. The vision of Malays
which remains longest in the
soldier's mind is that of children, mere infants of four or five, running beside
one, grabbing a finger of one's
hand (a hand that swung almost higher than their own heads) and demanding pennie
s whilst, from the
cigarettes that hung from the corners of infant mouths, they inhaled and breathe
d out tobacco smoke with all
the abandon of the chain smoker. That and their worldly whispers of "You want my
sister, tuan. My sister
very clean. Only two dollars, tuan" - and the little face would gaze up, in this
sordid business of soliciting,
with exactly the same baby air of pleading as when they asked for pennies.
Between the Malays and ourselves there sprang up a jovial fa miliarity which can
best be summed up in the
invariable greeting that passed between us "Hullo, Joe." All Malays, to us, were
Joe. To the Malays, all
Australians were Joe. This greeting accompanied by a cheerful "Thumbs Up" was ne
ver omitted. Had the
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
officers of the Eighth Australian Division been saluted as assiduously as the Ma
lays of the State of Negri
Sembilan were "hullo-Joe ed," they would have died of shock. Whether we were in
convoy, on a single truck,
on a route march or on leave, when you passed a native, you grinned, and he grin
ned, and you both raised the
right thumb and said, "Hello, Joe,' There was a warmth in this relationship of o
urs with the locals which partly
compensated for, and partly arose out of, the fact that it was the only social r
elationship open to us, Forbidden,
on pain almost of death, to visit or take out our own Australian nurses at Malac
ca, and ostracized by the vast
majority of Europeans on the peninsula, we turned the full force of our frustrat
ed conviviality upon the
Malays. And they responded nobly.
Two complications from this fraternization were feared. One was that in the proc
ess we might divulge
information as to our strength and numbers. The other was that the 99.9 per cent
chance of V.D. might, in
some cases, be translated into a 100 per cent fact. On both these scores the pow
ers-that-were feared
needlessly.
On the subject of our strength and numbers, it is certainly a fact that the loca
ls (taxi dancers, small boys,
traders and shopkeepers alike) questioned us enthusiastically. Those Malays who
are not curious are dead.
The questions were inevitable. Also, no doubt, there were the odd fifth columnis
ts anxious to accumulate
information against the day when they could sell it (for the native does nothing
for nothing) to the invader.
We, however, told them nothing. In spite of the fact that our common sense told
us that any native who cared
could come up the road, count us on parade, count our vehicles in the car park,
and count our mortars in the
rubber when we trained; and count our bombs on the innumerable occasions when we
shifted them to dryer
ground in spite of that, we told them nothing.
And, although our common sense told us that when natives de livered the vegetabl
e ration and saw our ration
figures; and when natives cleaned the camp's many drains; and when natives did t
he entire regiment's laundry
in the course of which they ascertained the exact number of men in each and ever
y hut in the camp al though
our common sense told us that when they did all these things it was rather impro
bable that they were unaware
of our strength, stitt yve told them nothing.
And when they told us, which they did with a great air of friendly triumph, we l
ooked quite wooden-faced...
and admitted nothing. Meanwhile, our Recreation Hut was plastered with notices i
nforming us that "The
Enemy Listened"; imploring us not to talk, and assuring us that if we did not ta
lk, no one would ever know
any thing. Only we ordinary soldiers thoroughly appreciated the fact that, on th
e contrary, everyone in the
district knew everything, but that so long as we remained in the district to def
end it, that knowledge could do
us no harm.
The second official fear that V.D. would be contracted was equally groundless. A
s far as we were concerned,
taxi girls were there only to be danced with; the ordinary Malay women were ther
e for the same reason as the
rubber trees they grew therel And they received no more attention than rubber tr
ees, except that their coloured
saris and, on occasions, their remarkably beautiful eyes and teeth made them rat
her more soothing to the optic
nerve.
And so life in Tampin proceeded. Mortar drill and manoeuvres during the day: foo
tball or hockey matches
twice a week: a walk down to the village each night. There some danced with the
taxi girls not many dances,
because they cost twenty-five cents each: some practised their Malay and grew fa
irly fluent: some bought
native ornaments in silver and pewter and sent them home: and always there were
the swarms of children the
shrill screams of "Pennies," "Cigarettes," "You want my sister, tuan?" and "Hull
o, Joe,'
The highlights of our village life were the occasional visits of a native-owned
cinema unit (which specialized
in showing, at one sitting, all fourteen chapters of particularly improbable Hol
lywood serials) and of native
circuses. At the latter, the entire regiment gasped at two Chinese, who dived th
rough a ring of razor-edged
knives all pointing inwards and gaped, in awe-struck silence, at a ballet of fiv
e native women, all of whom
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
were most noticeably pregnant. Both films and circuses, performed in a tent, wer
e punctuated by the shrill
screams of native audiences and by the over powering aroma of urine, owing to th
e delightful Malayan
custom of relieving oneself where one sits.
And in the tranquillity of these village interludes for there is no hour anywher
e which is more refreshing than
the first cool ones of the Malayan evening when the swallows and starlings settl
e down on the telephone
wires, wing to wing for miles, to sleep till the dawn rouses them to their shril
l flight it was almost impossible
to believe that a few thousand miles away the Old World was reeling, still less
that in French Indo-China,
China proper and Japan millions of troops waited for the order which would shatt
er this village peace for four
long years.
And yet there were signs of danger. When an artillery regiment can only be equip
ped with three-inch mortars,
and when no tanks or armour are ever seen, and when only a few comparatively slo
w Brewster Buffalo planes
ever ascend into the skies, and when there are virtually no automatic weapons at
all and not even enough
ammunition for issue to guards on sentry duty at bomb dumps then it is obvious t
hat all is not entirely well
This malaise became steadily more widespreadnowhere more so, apparently, than in
our own -high command.
Manoeuvres with full complements of trucks and equipment, the men wearing gas ma
sks and steel helmets,
became the order of the day: doubled guards the order of the night.
Even some of the natives sensed the tension and, as a symbol of it, there arrive
d on our doorstep one day a
small naked brown child, doe-eyed, white-toothed, delightful. As with all our sm
all visitors, he was fed till his
tummy was quite round and then told firmly to "pgt [go home]!"
Next morning he was found asleep in the mess hut: still naked, still delightful,
but his tummy quite flat and his
eyes rather fright ened. So we enquired and found that his parents had suddenly
left Tampin. Left in a panic
that they hadn't been able to explain. And now the small brown child was an orph
an. Without more ado, the
regiment adopted him.
For the next few weeks his brilliant smile and his sturdy refusal to wear any cl
othes, his insatiable appetite and
his refreshing air of complete innocence and confidence, made him a universal fa
vourite. As we came back
from trailing each day, he would be waiting at the gates. As each truckload of m
en came in, the dark eyes
would swing solemnly up to them and he would hold up a minute thumb and say, "Hu
llo, Joe," And they, for
their part, would gravely salute him and reply, "Hullo, Little Tinea," which was
what they called him, be
cause, like the affliction after which he was named, Little Tinea was always all
over the place.
When the war came to Tampin and his soldier foster parents were sent to fight el
sewhere, it is said that Little
Tinea was killed by the bombs. I don't know. I rather hope he was; for there was
no place for children such as
he in the arms of the soldiers of Nippon.
That moment, however, had not yet quite arrived. Though the tension increased an
d senior staff officers
appeared more and more often, looking less and less happy, war was still not wit
h us.
Nevertheless, the threat of it was sufficient to make life exceedingly uncomfort
able. Guard duty became a
chore which, as well as daytime duties, befell one almost every second night bec
ause of the doubled sentry
order and the increased number of posts. In an effort to offset the tedium of th
ese guards, they were
transformed into ceremonial affairs with glittering boots, razorlike creases in
tailored slacks, and highly
polished belts.
The Australian, however, does not derive much pleasure from such spit and polish
parades: and whenowing to
the frequency of surprise visits by senior staff officers a special ceremonial g
uard was kept constantly at the
alert, to appear in place of the actual guard on duty at any moment should a V.I
.P. arrive on the horizon, our
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
cup of displeasure was full.
It is worth noting that at a time when there were only three weeks left in which
to prepare to meet the invasion
which swiftly encom passed our total destruction, our regiment still had a man h
iding all day behind a bush at
the corner of the camp and the main road, so that whenever he saw a staff car ap
proaching he could blow a
whistle. When he blew his whistle the routine group of men on guard duty in the
guardhouse hid. They were
replaced (amidst much panic by the orderly officer) with a Special Glittering Gu
ard, who would at once fall in
and present arms thereby greatly im pressing the visiting staff officer, and, no
doubt, giving the Japanese
much cause to doubt the possibility of their ever achieving a victory in Malaya*

For weeks this madness persisted. The Brigadier Commanding Artillery appeared an
d, as his contribution to
the speeding up of the war effort, examined all the dixies in the cookhouse with
an eagle eye and declared that
they were dirty! This was quite true, had been true for months, and remained so
till our most veteran cook
died as a prisoner of those whom his dirtiness had not deterred some three years
later. To the Special
Glittering Guard the C.R.A. spoke words of praise. He even asked their sergeant
gravely did they practise rifle
drill in their spare time? Ths sergeant replied, equally gravely, "Yes" at which
God should, in fairness to
Ananias, have struck him dead, and the temporarily deposed Scruffy Guard (hiding
in a truck across the road)
became convulsed with laughter.
Later, Air Chief Marshal Sir Robert Brooke-Popham appeared; and he, too, was del
ighted with the Special
Glittering Guard. He spoke a few words to each man and asked him what he had don
e in his civilian days.
Regrettably, not a man told the truth. Solicitors said they had plumbed: a carpe
nter said that he trained
choirboys, and gave the Air Marshal a very lewd look: a hardened journalist flut
tered his eyelashes and
announced in effeminate tones that he was a ballet dancer. By the time the Air M
arshal had made his way as
far as me, all the more reasonable occupations having gone, I could only, in ans
wer to his query, say:
"Mortician, sir," which he said was very interesting.
In the course of the next few days, there were several false alarms and millions
of false rumours. One effect of
these was that a suffi cient number of.80S bullets was unearthed to enable each
member of the mounting
guard to place five in his magazine so long as the duty sergeant had remembered
to collect them from the
guard which was about to be relieved.
This innovation had some refreshing consequences. One was that few guard mountin
gs took place without a
detonation (someone always contrived whether accidentally or not to leave a bull
et in the breech of his rifle
and this, of course, was fired off in the course of the elaborate ritual of "cle
aring arms"). The instant reaction
to any such detonation was for all onlookers to gaze swiftly at the orderly offi
cer, and immediately upon
ascertaining that he still lived, there would be a howl of "Missed him, you sill
y bastard" where upon many
names would be taken and charges would next day be preferred for "conduct prejud
icial.. ,'
But a second and much pleasanter consequence came on the sentry beat itself. In
an effort to make guards
more alert, the orderly officer had taken to making surprise visits to all posts
over the last few weeks. In fact,
quite a lot of officers, on their way back from parties, had taken to attempting
to surprise the sentries. It had
become a sort of game for them. For us it was becoming very tedious.
I had first noticed it when I stood guarding the mortar-bomb dump with Cliffie o
ne night Cliffie spoke
excellent Malay and (as mentioned before) was the speediest signaller in the reg
iment and a 1918 artillery
officer. Therefore, as we stood back to back, I urged him, now that the war seem
ed to be coming closer to us,
to apply for a commission again because none of our officers spoke any Malay; ve
ry few of them could signal
at all, let alone fast, and still fewer of them had had battle experience. Cliff
ie replied sadly that his application
had been in for months and appeared to have gone and got itself lost!
And it was at this moment that I observed an officer weave an erratic course fro
m F Troop's lines towards the
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Officers Mess a course which took him (in brilliant moonlight) within forty yard
s of our dump. I pointed this
phenomenon out to Cliffie and we both followed the gentleman's course with all t
he interest of those who are
very bored and are, therefore, prepared to watch anything. At the Officers Mess
we were even more interested
to see him bear right and vanish into the bush below our dump, where he could be
heard crashing round in a
rather furtive fashion.
"What the hell do you think he's doing, Cliffie?" I asked, and Cliffie said he d
idn't know, he'd go and have a
look. So Cliffie made his way towards the bush whereupon the officer leapt out a
nd, as Cliffie said, "Good
evening, sir," shouted: "Got you!"
It appeared he had stalked us and caught us completely un awares! Nothing could
dissuade him. That sort of
thing happened all the time until we got live ammunition for our rifles on guard
. Then, owing to the
determination of one man, all surprise visits stopped.
This man, a gunner called Caldwell, was a lean, conscientious and stubborn soldi
er. He had spent all his life
farming and he stood no nonsense from anyone. The military claptrack of "Halt, w
ho goes there?"... "Advance
one pace and be recognized"... "Pass word and Reply" *.. was too much for Gunner
Caldwell. When he heard
anyone coming and he had very good ears he shoved a bullet firmly and audibly up
the spout, clicked off his
safety catch and bellowed, "Stop or I shoot." And if, after that, he saw or hear
d so much as an eyelash moving,
he shot! When the second duty officer on two successive guards had been despatch
ed into the jungle in frantic
haste by a volley of bullets from the redoubtable ex-farmer, the practice of sta
lking sentries ceased, as the
vernacular was, forth with.
8 "BATTLE STATIONS"
By the beginning of December, 1941, the Germans having moved firmly into most of
western Russia and the
Japanese having insinuated themselves slyly into much of Southeast Asia Manchuri
a and French Indo-China,
anywaythe atmosphere in Malaya became tenser. Everywhere training was accelerate
d; gas masks were in
spected almost daily; lectures were delivered on the Japanese and their habits,
their methods of warfare and
how to defeat them.
Someone circulated a rumour that on the Siam frontier of Malaya we had exactly o
ne million Sikhs; but,
although one had oneself seen two convoys of these troops heading north, no one
who was not half witted
believed the report. In the interests of security, however, one refrained from c
omment.
The intelligence officer spoke to us at great length on three sub jects. First,
the frequent use made by the
Japanese of crackers with which to frighten their enemies especially at night. S
econd, the use that the
Japanese would make of gas. Third, a quaint element in battle termed "justifiabl
e war risk,' This term
apparently embraced anything in an action which anyone might order you to do, at
any time however silly or
useless and at once seemed to commend itself most favourably to all our superior
s, who used it thenceforth
incessantly.
It is regrettable to have to rekte that the Japanese never in my experience reso
rted to crackers apparently
working on the oldfashioned principle that mortar bombs were better: that they u
sed no gas which was
perhaps as well when one recollects that in answer to a question: "How do you de
contaminate a
twenty-fivepounder gun?" the intelligence officer had replied, "Take it to piece
s: scrape all the paint off it, and
then boil it in a petrol drum!"; and that, once the war started, practically the
only order ever issued to an army
only too anxious to indulge in a spot of justifiable war risk by engaging the en
emy was "Withdraw"!
Nevertheless, it was upon the basis of these three principles that our training
continued. As we made corduroy
mats (which we knew from experience to be quite valueless as a track for Army ve
hicles in heavy mud
although that was their purpose) : and as we ran up and down the road wearing ga
s masks and steel helmets,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
the better to prepare ourselves for the coming battle, we could only feel profou
nd relief that at least we were
extremely fit. Little knowing how prophetic his words would be, Cliffie one morn
ing (as we doubled for the
tenth time up and down the road outside Regimental Head quarters) snatched off h
is steaming gas mask and
snarled: "Well, probably we won't be able to do the Japs much harm: but at least
the bastards'll have to chase
us all the way to Singapore before they'll ever catch us." Two months later that
was exactly what the Japanese
did.
Irksome though these worthless preparations were, however, our authorities still
had the wisdom to allow the
occasional respite of sport. And so it happened that one afternoon we went to Ma
lacca to play the Army
Service Corps rugby football. The A.S.C. fed us nobly and then annihilated us on
the field. I marked a winger
who seemed many feet taller than myself and ran with his knees high. To stop him
was both difficult and
painful. But when our own back line moved off and Shearer passed to Hingst, and
Hingst beautiful foot
ballerpassed to me, that same opponent at once crushed me to the ground with app
alling ease. However, we
enjoyed the carefree at mosphere of this regimental game, after the strain of th
e few weeks before, and
accepted our defeat quite happily.
The match over, we showered, dried thoroughly, flung talcum powder over most of
the accessible portions of
our respective anatomies an efficient preventative against the tinea that crept
and then, dressed in cool, clean
clothes, moved into the town of Malacca to dance, or eat, or sit in the cinema,
according to one's mood. It was
perhaps as well that at that moment no one realized that Shearer and Hingst, not
to mention half a dozen other
members of our team, would never throw a football again.
At about half past ten just when our revels in Malacca were reaching their heigh
t the alarm was soundedl
Provosts rushed round blowing whistles: officers (wearing tin hats, revolvers an
d an urgent expression)
appeared everywhere in trucks, saying, "Get back to your camp at once,' and then
vanishing again before one
had time to clamber aboard: and everywhere the rumour flashed round, "It's war."
It was not a nice feeling.
Abruptly the revels ceased. The taxi girls, abandoned, sat silent and lonely at
their tables. The cinemas
emptied: the caf6s vomited a stream of khaki soldiers all heading for camp. No o
ne having thought of sending
in transport for these hundreds of men, they quickly set about securing their ow
n. Cabs, rickshaws and passing
cars were hailed and swiftly loaded. Very soon a motley convoy headed out of Mal
acca towards Tampin some
fifteen miles away.
As I passed over the bridge just outside the town (in a cab which I shared with
a young lieutenant, a gun
sergeant and Johnny Iceton), I noticed a rickshaw pursuing a particularly errati
c course. On further
examination, it proved to be Piddington he who was to be the only survivor from
an office of five who had
joined the regi ment. Piddington with Magee and Robinson (two others of that fiv
e) had upon the alarm
boarded a rickshaw. Midst many protes tations, the rickshaw boy had at last set
out for Tampin. At the bridge
he had tired having covered only two of the fifteen miles so now Piddington, who
had had a good evening,
pulled the rick shaw in which (in drunken splendour) rode Magee... and Rob inson
... and the rickshaw boy.
"Want a lift, Piddo?" I shouted, telling the cab driver to pull up.
"Lift?" demanded he aggressively. "Whaffor? Nothing wrong with these. Much bette
r than those taxis. Very
unsafe Malayan taxis. Remember what your grandmother said?" And with that he jog
ged off shouting:
"Fares, please, fares, please move right down the centre there. No standing on t
he platform," so I told our
driver to carry on.
"How much to take to Tampin, tuan?" he enquired threateningly.
"A smack in the kisser if you don't" replied Johnny Iceton succinctly, whereupon
we at once moved off and
quickly repassed the rickshaw.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
We completed the trip without further excitement, except that the young lieutena
nt suddenly decided that
someone should keep a lookout for enemy aircraft He was a bit of a dope but harm
less enough, so we allowed
him to perform this vital function himself, which he did with enormous enthusias
m, standing on the front seat
with his head and shoulders out of the sun roof and his revolver in his hand. Me
anwhile, the Malay driver
hurtled through the darkness whilst Johnny surveyed our air lookout with a frank
ly jaundiced eye; the gun
sergeant sang about forty-nine choruses of "Bless Em All" in the revised version
, and I wondered to myself
whether it was really possiblewars being nowadays so much bigger and better than
they had ever been before
to survive one.
We arrived at the camp shortly before midnight to find it seething seething with
extra guards, rumours and
official indecision. Since no one would tell me what to do, I went to my hut and
cleaned my rifle. On almost
every bed others sat doing the same thing. The bed beside mine Hugh Moore's was
empty. He was in hospital
with fever and I wondered how all this would affect him and when he would rejoin
us.
I had just finished with the pull-through when an N.C.O, came in and issued us w
ith five rounds each of
ammunition. Johnny Iceton looked at him in incredulous amazement. "What," he que
ried, "five rounds for
every man in the regiment?" The N.C.O. nodded.
"Well, then,' said Johnny firmly, "it bloody must be war," and with that we all
went to bed and swiftly to
sleep.
Next day, to set upon the situation the seal of official acknowledg ment that he
re was a crisis, we were issued
with many special orders. First: "No native will be allowed to enter the camp fo
r any purpose without his
pass." The camp's squad of native workers had been issued with these passes mont
hs earlier when we had
arrived. They had all, long since, lost them. Of this rather human weakness, how
ever, the orders took no
notice at all. We were, the order continued, to challenge all natives. We were,
moreover, to challenge them in
Malay. We were to say: "Berenti jika-lau tidak say ah something or other" which
I now forget and which most
men forgot the second they heard it. This gabble meant, "Halt: if not I shoot!"
"Finally," the order concluded, "if the challenged native does not halt, you mus
t shoot!" With decided distaste,
we marched to our posts. What ensued was chaos.
Upon being challenged, the natives would just shrug cheerfully, scratch their le
gs and spit betel-nut juice and
assure us that their passes were lost. The fierce gabble (the one which meant th
at if they did not then
immediately halt one would shoot them), they greeted with wide smiles, revealing
a mouth full of
gold-capped teeth and an agreeable certainty that one was talking nonsense. They
would then march straight
under the muzzle of one's out stretched and indignant rifle and, giving the inev
itable greeting of the
up-pointed thumb and the "Hullo, Joe, * would pass confidently into lie camp. On
e was then confronted with
the inhuman necessity of blowing their heads off from behind or of sparing them
and endeavouring to do
better with the next. At the end of the day, the men of the regiment compared no
tes. Everywhere one heard the
same question: "How many boongs did you manage to halt today, mate?" and everywh
ere one heard the same
answer, "Sweet F.A. How about you?" If it was necessary to the winning of the Ma
layan campaign that native
workers, whom we knew as well as our regi mental comrades, be either halted for
identification or shot, then
upon that very first day of the crisis, the war was lost!
Other signs of official reaction came equally swiftly. One must carry one's rifl
e and one's five rounds of
ammunition everywhere. When men in the latrines were charged for attending to th
e demands of nature
without the protection of firearms, it was realized that this order was not one
with which to trifle.
Next we must again move, count, wipe and take the temperature of every mortar bo
mb in the two regimental
dumps, in spite of the fact that this extraordinary performance had only a few d
ays earlier been completed for
the thousandth time.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Also, we must all look at, and have a vague notion how to operate, the three tom
my guns to each battery of
three hundred men which had been lavishly issued to us as our total automatic fi
repower against the
cracker-throwing Japanese. We accordingly looked and someone even rashly enquire
d could he fire one? He
was, of course, savagely reprimanded and informed that as there was prac tically
no ammunition available for
any of these guns he most certainly could not.
Next, one Bren carrier arrived for each battery nasty, inadequate vehicles with
small protection from the
ground and none at all from above (as the enemy were quick to demonstrate). Thes
e, with one armoured car,
were to be our total mobile reply to the Japanese and their tanks.
Finally, the regiment was presented with some twenty-fivepounders. Beautiful Eng
lish guns, still thick with
the grease that had been plastered on them to protect them on their journey from
factories in Britain. There
were not sufficient of them, it was ad mitted: but they were a delightful piece
of mechanism and the eyes of
many a gunner, long dulled by the prosaic ugliness of our threeinch mortars, sho
ne again as he glanced down
the barrel, over the shield, on to the dials and controls and right back past th
e breech block to the spade. Guns
again instead of stovepipes it was a nice feeling. Quickly each gun was cleaned
by volunteers of its protective
grease and polished till it was spotless. In their few minutes of spare time, me
n came from all over the camp
and practised their drill. Had the C.RA. appeared at that moment and asked, "Tel
l me, Sergeant: do the men
practise in their spare time?" then the answer could, truthfully this time, have
been "Yes."
So the second day of the crisis passed. Passed with spirits as high as spirits c
an be only when men are in good
health, are confident of themselves and one another and though under no illusion
s about the insufficiency of
all their weapons, from aeroplanes to bullets are anxious to test themselves aga
inst this mysterious element
known as "The Enemy."
The enemy meantime appeared to dally; so we, perhaps to deter him, perhaps to pr
epare for his onslaught, or
perhaps for both, were ordered to proceed at once to battle stations.
9 AIRBORNE INVASION
The movement of the entire regiment was accomplished at night with a maximum of
enthusiasm and a
minimum of efficiency* Con voys howled off, with trucks at thirty-yard intervals
and no head lights. The
regiment was split up into numerous small units and sent out to protect and prov
ide firepower for various
aerodromes. The beautiful new twenty-five-pounders we left behind at Tampin to b
e guarded by a small rear
guard along with our store, which bulged with the six months* accumulation of ev
erything the quartermaster
sergeant had managed in that time not to issue.
Badly briefed and hurriedly assembled, these various convoys roared out of the a
rea they knew so well and,
armed with bully beef and mortars, swiftly proceeded to lose themselves all over
districts they had never seen
in central Malaya. Before morning, however, each convoy had found itself at leas
t one aerodrome to guard
and was assiduously staring into the gloom lest enemy paratroopers de scend unob
served.
Nerves (which had not been improved by a rocketing trip of anything up to a hund
red miles in complete
darkness on one of the most dangerous road systems in the world) grew tauter as,
for the third night in
succession, there was no sleep. In the darkness, many a sentry blazed away at a
signalling fifth columnist only
to realize, almost at once, that it was nothing more harmful than a glowworm.
The stand-to period from dawn onwards (by which time everyone had equipped himse
lf with a six-foot-deep
slit trench and a firing step ) was made even more miserable than that dreary ho
ur normally is by the millions
of sand flies which suddenly awakened swarmed out of the undergrowth and flew in
to one's tin hat. Having
got in under the headband, they were too stupid to find their way out again and
retaliated by burrowing into
the hair and biting badtemperedly. Everywhere the watery dawn air was rent by ho
wls of bad language and
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
the clanging of tin hats thrown to the ground as their owners clawed wildly at t
heir scalps.
The situation was in no way improved by the realization on the part of at least
one group that they were
guarding the wrong aero drome. They were at Kluang and should apparently have be
en at Kahang. So they
loaded all their mortars again, and all the bombs, and all the stores and went t
o Kahang where they were
greeted with the encouraging news that Pearl Harbour had that day been devastate
d by the Japanese and that
Kahang Aerodrome had been mined for destruction by the engineers.
Accordingly all the mortars were placed in pits which had to be dug round the ci
rcumference of the field; all
the gunners took up their positions in new slit trenches which had to be dug rou
nd the mortars: and the
gunners then waited for the Japanese paratroopers to land when every mortar was
at once to fire, whereupon
the defenders would very successfully wipe one another out.
This point of view had been put rather forcibly by several N.C.O,'s to the offic
ers in command, but had not
made any consider able impression, as the aforesaid officers were very busy argu
ing bitterly over the
respective merits, in destroying an airfield, of mines and aerial bombing. Since
we had no aeroplanes at all in
the vicinity and few indeed in the whole of Malaya it was purely an academic arg
ument but seemed,
nevertheless, engrossing. Reluctant, therefore, but resigned, the men awaited th
e dawn. They were saved from
mutual obliteration by the failure of the wicked Japanese to send paratroopers.
It turned out to be typical of the
war our staff planned that its initial stages were devoted entirely to the destr
uction of an airborne invasion
which invasion, in fact, never came and was never even intended.
It was also typical of the war our staff planned against the enemy that when, on
its outbreak on December 8,
1941, the troops on the Siam frontier asked permission to cross the border, seek
the enemy out, and destroy
him, the permission was refused until it was too late anyway. Moreover, it might
quite profitably be pointed
out, the Allied Conference of 1940 on the defence needs of Malaya had de cided u
pon a minimum of 40
battalions with full support (including armour and tanks ) for the Thailand fron
tier alone, plus 566 first-line
planes. In actual fact, there were only 32 battalions in all of Malaya; there we
re only 141 planes (none of them
up to international stand ard); and there were no tanks none at all. Last-ditch
orders assume a somewhat
different aspect when these facts are appended to them.
The rumoured "million Sikh troops" on the frontier being in actual fact only a f
ew thousand, the enemy was
able to mass his forces at his leisure. When the attack came, the Argylls and th
e Leicesters and llth Indian
Division were quickly chopped to pieces by inces sant tank-supported attacks. An
d so within the first days of
the campaign the initiative was handed to the enemy.
When, in the course of the next two months, no really construc tive effort was e
ver made by our command to
regain the initiative, the battle was lost. No amount of heroism, nor silly orde
rs talking about the "yielding of
our boasted fortress to an inferior enemy" being "disgraceful" to our "whole fig
hting reputation," could save
Singapore. The fierce courage of the British and Indian troops on the northern f
rontier of Malaya was bloodily
pulped by the Japanese tanks on the Slim River pulped and scattered in a thousan
d di ferent directions into the
neighbouring fever-stricken jungles. The disastrous retreat to destruction had b
egun.
Of this, however, on the night of December 8, the troop of which 1 was a member
was blissfully unaware.
Having recovered from our irritation at leaving behind our treasured twenty-five
-pounders, we had careered
on all night to the east coast for we had to reach Mersing before dawn or (the i
ntelligence officer said) be
wiped out by aerial attacks on the road.
With the loss of only two trucks overturned on Malaya's narrow winding roads, we
passed through the
Australian-held position at Mersing. Here, indeed, were encouraging signs of pre
paredness. The gunners of
our sister regiment the 2,'10th had registered every inch of it and had complete
confidence in their
eighteen-pounders. They gazed at our mortars with open contempt. The Queensland
infantry whom they
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
supported knew every track and inlet in the area, had cleared fire lanes everywh
ere, had sent the native
population packing and were (as their swift challenges out of the blackness indi
cated) briskly ready for war.
To have uprooted this determined body of men would have taken the Japanese many
months. As it happened,
the operation was achieved far more simply not many weeks later by an order from
our own Fort Canning
British Head quarters on the island of Singapore.
This, too, though, was still to come. For the moment we were rushed to the river
bank and there met by the
Navy. The Navy had barges and light river craft. Into these we were to load abou
t ten thousand mortar bombs,
our food and equipment and with one company of infantry proceed up the river to
what had been a
Japanese-owned mine called Bukit Langkap.
Undeterred by the prodigious nature of this task, we accomplished it in six hour
s of concerted effort and so
found ourselves being towed on close-packed barges up the river. We arrived at B
ukit Langkap about two
hours later.
Bukit Langkap was a mountain (made partly by man, partly by God) of red clay, cu
t into open-cast mining
terraces and ravines. Access to its summit had been by a railway which the Japan
ese had, before they
departed, thoughtlessly destroyed. The only alternative route was a narrow goat
track which ran up alongside
the railway. It was raining.
Up this track, therefore, from the barges on the river to the summit of the moun
tain, we manhandled our ten
thousand mortar bombs and our mortars. After the first mile-long trip made by ea
ch of the troop's
hundred-odd men, the track turned from wet clay to an orange ribbon of grease. T
he ensuing twenty trips were
an agony of aching muscles and calamitous falls which resulted in a most diverti
ng glissade of both the carrier
and his very susceptible cargo of six bombs. These abrupt descents proved highly
amusing to all except the
participant and those other carriers whom he collected on his swift return down
the grease shoot to the foot of
the mountain.
Nevertheless, we eventually got all the bombs up to the top of the mountain. Eve
n then there was no rest. We
dug slit trenches and mortar pits: cleared lanes of fire: laid signal wires and
took the bearings of all likely
targets an operation made none the easier by the fact that (because of the ore i
n all the rocks) no two
compasses ever gave the same reading and no one compass ever produced even simil
ar results twice running.
In the midst of these exertions we heard over our wireless set that the battlesh
ips Prince of Wales and Repulse
had been sunk off the east Malayan coast Sunk because they had inadequate aerial
and light craft support for
capital ships. When we asked what they were doing sailing round with inadequate
protection a rumour was
whis pered that they came to Malayan waters because the Australian Government ha
d (using the possible
withdrawal of its troops in the Middle East as a weapon) blackmailed the British
Government into sending
two capital ships out to Singapore. Sick with the realization that the British N
avy had suffered its first real
defeat in history and that we on Malaya were now obviously without any substanti
al naval protection against
the landing of enemy convoys, we turned with relief to our burrowings into the s
ide of the mountain of clay.
The next day I wrote to Hugh Moore still in hospital at Malacca and asked him wh
at were his chances of
rejoining us before "the blue" started. As I took the letter down to our troop o
fficer to be censored (even if
there were no chance of its being posted), tie three Dutch Wildebeestes which pa
ssed our way daily and
seemed to be our only air force in Malaya lumbered slowly overheadbound for Kota
Bahru where the Japs had
landed. We had come to have an affection for these three antiquated aircraft wit
h their trian gular
identification mark and their pedestrian gait. It was sad that within a matter o
f days they should all have been
blasted out of the skies by the swarms of Japanese Zeros which protected the con
voy they had been sent to
attack.
Then, before we had even had time to look at all the dirty pic tures our Japanes
e predecessors had left behind
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
them: before we could properly appreciate that here we were, one hundred gunners
and one hundred
infantrymen, on a mountain island from which a wall of impenetrable jungle and a
moat of crocodile-infested
river made all retreat impossible once we had exhausted our ten thousand bombs:
but not before we realized
that Bukit Langkap was only a derelict mine which had no military value whatsoev
er we were ordered to
abandon the mine and return to Mersing.
Down came all the mortars, down came all the bombs, up came all the signal wires
, and all our computations
as to line, range and angle of sight of all possible targets within the scope of
a three-inch mortar were flung
into the river. The preparations of the last seven days had been as futile as th
ey had been strenuous.
The same barges collected us, escorted by the same naval river craft. The same e
quipment was loaded onto
them and, at Mersing, taken off them. Then, in great haste, we rushed to Kluang
Aero dromeit was about to be
attacked, we were told, by paratroops,
At Kluang we made a dump for all our bombs: dug slit trenches for ourselves and
pits for our mortars; made a
new road through the rubber for our vehicles and all the time waited for the ene
my troops to come floating
down. We celebrated Christmas Day with a large dinner and the following day with
a heavy air raid by
twenty-seven Japanese bombers, in the course of which many bombs but never a par
achute landed on the
aerodrome.
On the same day as our new road through the rubber was com pleted, the regiment
which had gradually been
converging from all sides on Kluang received fresh orders. We were to be reconst
ituted as a three-battery
regiment instead of a two-battery one. The new battery was to be called the 65th
. All batteries were to be
equipped with field guns and take up fresh battle stations.
So, abandoning our mortars and the nice new road, we moved off, we of the new 65
th, in swift convoy and
armed with twenty-fivepounders. We moved one hundred miles across to the west co
ast of Malaya to a
rendezvous outside a town we had never even heard of called Muar. Eventually we
were to know it quite well.
The position as it was at that time was then put to us, in his own inimitably in
adequate style, by our
intelligence officer who assured us that he wanted to "put us in the picture,' E
ven as painted by the
intelligence officer, the "picture" was no rosy landscape.
It appeared that at least half of Malaya following the slaughter of the British
troops and the llth Indian
Division on the Slim River by Japanese tankshad been systematically abandoned. A
scorchedearth policy had
been, however, conscientiously employed. All the dredges in the tin mines had be
en destroyed: all the rubber
in store houses had been burnt: all the acid used to coagulate latex had been re
moved: all bridges had been
blown. The loss of Kuala Lumpur, administrative centre of the Malay States, was
glossed over by the sudden
announcement that it had been declared an Open City. Any landings other than the
initial one at Kota Bahru
on the northeast coast were discreetly not mentioned at all. And now, it was ass
erted, Australian fighting
troops were, for the first time, to take the brunt of the Japanese onslaught on
a line which extended across
Malaya from Muar on the west, to Segamat in the centre, to Mersing on the east.
The calamitous loss of the
millions of pounds* worth of ma chinery, rubber, tin and installations which the
retreat to this line inevitably
involved were dismissed, without any reference to it at all, by the Intelligence
Report.
Nor did the report see fit to inform us that the Argylls and Leicesters and Gurk
has (who fought so gallantly
downwards from the Siam frontier) had been withdrawn every day, day after day, t
o fresh positions. They
were never allowed to contact the enemy seri ously, but always just as he advanc
ed withdrawn ten or fifteen
miles by forced marches to yet another line. So that, for day after day and week
after week, they marched, dug
in, waited sleeplessly at the alert, and then marched again. For two hundred-odd
miles they had retreated,
without rest, down the peninsula. They were utterly exhausted in this war which
contrary to all classic
principles seemed to aim at neither seeking out the enemy nor destroying him.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Nor did the report see fit to tell us that this method of waging war against the
Japanese would be maintained
to the bitter end and only circumvented when the enemy moved more swiftly than c
ould the orders to
withdraw.
Least of all did the report see fit to inform us that in the precipi tate evacua
tion of Penang, high up on the west
coast, hundreds of small craft (launches, junks, fishing boats vessels of every
description) had been left intact
for the use of the swarming troops of the enemy. Not having this interesting fac
t before us, we decided calmly,
though wrongly enough, that we would hold the Jap when he arrived. Obviously, he
must come down the
mainland: then we would clash: then he would stop. He must come down the mainlan
d, we thought, because
he had no boats in which to come down the shallow waters of the west coast.
So we received orders to dig in on the southern bank of the Muar River. A brigad
e of Indian troops were to
dig in with us: we were to await the frontal attack by land. The Imperial Japane
se Army mean time sent a
force three or four times stronger than ours to march against us. This we awaite
d confidently. Of the other
force which the Japanese sent by sea in the hundreds of small craft so happily p
resented to them at Penang, we
remained in blissful ignorance that force was to make sure that our lines of com
munication were severed and
that the initial successes we gained against the enemy at both Muar and Gemas sh
ould be brought to nothing.
But since the Intelligence Report had made no mention of these hilarious circums
tances, we were naturally
unaware of what was about to befall us. We simply sat in the rubber plantation n
ear Muar and listened to the
young officer's pleasant tones and wondered just how much of it all one could be
lieve this time. Then the
battery commander, Major Julius a dark, stocky, bad-tempered man re spectfully k
nown (for he was a brilliant
soldier) as the Black Bastard read out an order from Australian Command, which s
tated that the Japanese had
been fortunate enough so far in their cam paign not to have encountered Australi
an troops. Now they were to
encounter a solid line of Australians right across the peninsula. This, the orde
r unmistakably implied, was
very sad indeed for the Japa nese. They would be halted in their advance. Then t
hey would be driven back.
Then they would be flung clean out of Malaya and all this, the order made it qui
te dear, by us! It was most
encouraging*
Julius finished reading the order, his voice flat and his eyebrow raised cynical
ly, then asked were there any
questions. No one had any questions. The battery were then ordered to move out o
f the rendezvous and take
up their various positions along the riverbank.
As if to mark the occasion, the heavens wept copiously and all the trucks got bo
gged and there was a great
deal of bad language. Into the midst of this confusion came a deputation from th
e fierce Indian infantry
brigade who, with our battery of two hundred gun ners, were to halt the enemy's
west coast advance. They had
encoun tered their first ghastly loss of the war they had ran out of ghi (their
vegetable cooking oil) and
consequently could not prepare their beloved chapatties. What, they asked, could
they do?
At first we told them rudely at which they were frankly shocked. Then we realize
d the truth until they got ghi
there would be no war for the Indians of this 45th Brigade. If it hadn't been ra
ining so hard, and if there hadn't
been so many trucks bogged down, we might even then have stopped to consider thi
s rather unwarlike aspect
of the behaviour of our colleagues in arms. But it was raining, so we didn't whi
ch, as it happened, was a pity.
From somewhere or other ghi was scrounged; the Indians happily set to work cooki
ng; and we managed at last
to get out of the bogs of our rendezvous in the rubber onto the firm surface of
the road. Late that afternoon the
entire force had begun to dig in along the river and the stage was set for the b
attle which General Percival was
to describe as ".. one of the most sanguinary of the Malayan Campaign."
This "sanguinary battle" had a dress rehearsal of a very mixed quality. Two thin
gs quickly became evident in
the few days before the enemy arrived on the far side of the river. The first wa
s that our guns, under the
inspired direction of Major Julius, were going to wreak a great deal of havoc: t
he second was that the majority
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
of brand-new rifles issued to the 45th Indian Brigade were going to wreak no hav
oc at all The reason for this
was simple the greater part of the brigade was composed of young natives who had
been in the Army only a
few months (most of that spent travelling from India to Malaya) and none of them
had even the smallest idea
about how to aim and fire anything.
Very little could be accomplished with them in the few days before the battle co
mmenced. The more
amenable to instruction learnt how to discharge a rifle which they did without a
ny dis crimination at all, in no
particular direction, so long as it was away but most of them remained in a stat
e of profound ignorance and
growing disquiet.
When the first air raid hit the town and they saw the murderous effects of the a
nti-personnel bombs dropped
by the Japanese "daisycutters" which carved the prostrate Malays into horizontal
slices they decided once and
for all that wars were bloody affairs not at all to their liking. Immediately a
trickle of these youngsters seeped
off into the undergrowth. When the enemy appeared in force on the opposite banks
of the river, the trickle
turned into a fullblooded torrent, as thousands of Gwahlis shed boots, uniforms
and rifles and padded off,
barefooted, into the dark silence of the jungle.
On the far side of the river Shearer, the officer in the observation post he who
had played such determined
football only a few weeks earlier announced calmly over his field telephone that
the Japs were coming
through the rubber on all sides. He ordered his assist ant to attempt an escape
to the river and then himself
covered the latter's long run, at the same time directing fire from our guns. A
few seconds later his steady
voice stopped in mid-sentence and the new-formed 65th Battery had suffered its f
irst loss.
Our impressive brigade having dwindled abruptly to one battery of gunners with n
o bayonet training, plus the
handful of Jaht troops who had been mixed with the other Indians as a bolstering
influence, plus the 45th
Brigade's British officers there were also a few Gwahlis who, though they had no
stomach for fighting, had
not had the courage to depart with their fellow tribesmen the Japanese soon foun
d an easy landing place and
Muar suddenly swarmed with enemy troops.
Every gun, every truck, every platoon was cut off and overrun. Dive bombers howl
ed down hour after hour,
always unopposed. In a series of furious engagements, almost all of the guns and
crews fought their way out
of the town and took up a new position on its outskirts. There the remaining Gwa
hlis now unanimously
termed "The Galloping Gwahlis" decided finally that this business of war was not
good enough. They
abandoned trucks so that they blocked entire convoys: they ran backwards and for
wards in the utmost panic:
they lit fires to cook chapatties and shed clothes everywhere.
Never slow to take advantage of any situation, the Australians hur riedly re-equ
ipped themselves with new
rifles our own being all of 1918 vintage. It was quite simple. You just said, "L
ook out, Joe AEROPLANE,'
and, at that magic word, the terrified Gwahli (who had long since learnt what we
had all learnt that aeroplanes
were pieces of machinery produced only in Japan) flung himself flat on his face
and waited frantically for the
All Clear. They waited quite some time, some of them. Anyhow, by the time they p
lucked up courage to look
for themselves, their nice new rifles had invariably gone and beside them they f
ound a battered old Australian
one which seemed just as good to them because they only used rifles as walking s
ticks anyway.
After waiting a day for the attack, which could not have failed to be our coup d
e grdce, and which did not
come, Julius decided to send to Rear Headquarters for the twenty reinforcements
who were to arrive that
evening. Hugh Moore and myself were sent back with the message.
Next morning, just before we left Rear Headquarters with these reinforcements to
rejoin the battery, two
battalions of Australian infantry arrived to replace the evanescent Gwhalis, to
save what was left of the
original Muar force and to halt the Japanese*
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
All of these things they did in a savage battle that same day. They swept the Ja
panese back from the heights
and our entire force rescued and rescuers then formed a hollow square round a cr
oss roads called Barkri. This
formation the Japanese attacked that night, and penetrated. Each side of the per
imeter turned inwards and fired
furiously at the intruders whilst in the centre of the holocaust men fought bitt
er hand-to-hand battles in the
blackness. When dawn came, it was found that friend had bayoneted friend, foe fo
e, and that the.303 bullets
poured so furiously inwards had gone, equally furiously, outwards to the other s
ide of the perimeter and there
settled in many an Australian limb. From that time onwards the order was that th
e enemy were to be engaged
at night only with bayonets and we gunners, who had previously used bayonets sol
ely for the purpose of
opening condensed milk and bully beef tins, now had to view these beastly weapon
s in a new and more
serious light, which filled us with dismay.
Attacks and counterattacks continued furiously next day, with the Australian 19t
h and 29th Battalions more
than holding their own against a division of Imperial Japanese Guards. Irritated
by this unexpected delay, the
Japs sent dive bombers to scour the rubber and heavy tanks to clear the road. Bu
t the bombs achieved little
and the tanks were awaited by a troop of coldly determined anti tank gunners who
allowed them to approach
within twenty yards and then swiftly destroyed five of them. The enemy then lost
his taste for mechanized
warfare and returned to his policy of infiltration and attacks from the rear lea
ving the blazing tanks on the
crossroads as a sign of our willingness to "mix it"
In full daylight the battery withdrew from Barkri crossroads about half a mile f
urther back. From there we
were to provide our infantry with fire support. All day long small-arms fire sma
cked around us as, once again,
we started the inevitable ritual of digging in. Hugh Moore was with me and was n
ot pleased.
Dug thousands of these in the last few days," he complained. "What's the use of
it?" and then a dive bomber
roared down and plastered the area with noise and metal and, as we crouched in o
ur half-finished slit trench,
we both knew what the use was. The task was completed in silence. I dug without
a break for an hour. My
clothes were soaking in a petrol tin of water, so I worked naked. All around our
heads there were fierce
detonations which the experts said were the crackers we had been told about by t
he intelligence officer. Most
of the men were taking no risks: but I had watched for some time, observed no ma
rks of any bullets on the
sappy rubber trees and decided that crackers they were. Although terrified of bu
llets, I was not particularly
worried by mere fireworks. I there fore ignored them and finished my job thereby
earning myself much
undeserved praise as a "brave bastard" from those who, lacking my intelligence,
had not identified the sharp
explosion for the harmless crackers that they were.
Just as I finished the trench and dropped into it to snatch an hour's sleep, a g
un sergeant stood up out of his
shelter. Instantly he spun round clutching his neck with a hand that, even as th
e fingers twitched back from
raw meat, quickly became scarlet. One of the "crackers" had struck him in the th
roat and blown most of it
away. Once and for all the myth of harmless fireworks was exploded they were bul
lets, and that was that.
Shaking with retrospective terror, I crouched at the bottom of my slit trench an
d wondered whether I would
ever regain sufficient courage to leave it.
From that moment onwards we were continuously dive-bombed. Our infantry, just a
few hundred yards up the
road, were badly mauled and their numbers reduced by half. Our communications wi
th them even over that
short distance were constantly dis rupted by roving groups of enemy troops who c
ut field-telephone wires and
machine-gunned despatch riders. The gunner who had been in the observation post
with Shearer on the far
side of the river, and who had miraculously escaped at that time, now met his de
ath trying to get word through
to the crossroads.
Having dug ourselves securely in, in a position that favoured us, and witiht our
wounded tucked away in
trucks in the centre of our position, \ve waited for the inevitable attack. That
was the moment some half-wit
with more seniority than sense chose to uproot us and move us back yet another f
ew hundred yards to the edge
of a padang. There we had no shelter, man-made or otherwise; our trucks were cle
arly visible from the skies
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
and numerous tracks led like pointers to our lines. Since attack was imminent, w
e had no time to dig in and
accordingly lay waiting behind whatever offered the most cover.
Hugh and I found a large ants* nest with a wide stump on its top. To the fury of
the ants, we lay on the lee
side of this carefully spreading our ground sheets first, so that we would trick
the deathdealing hookworm. We
cocked rifles and waited.
Julius came up, brows black and bad-tempered as ever, and sur veyed us scowling.

"Good position," he said. "Move your water bottle into the shade, though you'll
need every drop before we're
finished." Then he stumped off, halted and turned around again. "By the way," he
added, "there's & message
just come up from Base that tomorrow we'll get full aerial support. They say the
sky'll be black with our
planes. Pass it on. I've got to go to a brigade conference." For a second he sto
od staring through us with that
same cynical lift of the eyebrow as when he had read the Australian "Drive them
out of Malaya" order as well
he might. We had been given this same message every day for a week. So far we ha
d seen no Allied planes ait
all. Abruptly he turned away and made off down to a bungalow on the edge of the
padang, where the brigade
officers were to meet
"What'd he say?" the men. farther down demanded.
"Sky'll be black with our planes tomorrow," I told them.
"What, again?" demanded Johnny Iceton: and someone else burst into "Tell me the
old, old story": and all
along the line the word was passed that some silly cow at Base had promised that
next morning we would get
full aerial support.
To give added weight to an already ponderous and palpable piece of official stup
idity, a dive bomber lifted
angrily over the crest of the hill, roared across the padang, wheeled sharply an
d (following the long line of
staff cars which so sensibly led right up to the door way of the bungalow wherei
n all our senior officers
conferred) dropped a large aerial torpedo straight through its roof. Thence forw
ard we had no senior officers.
Ignoring the dive bomber and its spattering machine guns, men rushed down the hi
ll from all sides to give
what help they could. In the murderous scene of the wrecked and smouldering bung
alow, Julius was one of
the few who still lived and he obviously would not live for long if he did not s
wiftly reach a casualty clearing
station of some kind. We had no casualty clearing station. Dozens of men volunte
ered to try to get him back.
After an ominous day's silence from our Rear Headquarters and B Echelon, it was
obvious that the road back
was no longer in our hands, but there were still those who were only too ready t
o attempt the run to get this
one extraordinary man back where his life might be saved.
Eventually, with Julius protesting in his customary violent lan guage, his drive
r, his Ack and an armoured car
set out to run the gauntlet. Half an hour later a bloodied figure staggered into
our perimeter. It appeared that
eight hundred yards down the road their path had been blocked by fallen trees an
d their vehicles shot to rib
bons by machine guns placed on both banks. This was the only sur vivor. Wearily
he sat down and men dug
bullets out of his broad back and patched him up whilst he held his head in his
hands.
Quickly the report spread that the Black Bastard was dead: and everywhere the at
mosphere tautened by the
knowledge that our best soldier had not survived and that we were now surrounded
expressions became
grimmer.
Using their enormous superiority of numbers and their undisputed command of the
air to advantage, the
Japanese now exerted more pressure. One gun, detected from the air, had already
been put out of action by a
shower of mortar bombs which hit it and its crew squarely. The Japs were proving
themselves most adept at
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
this liai son between their aircraft and mobile land groups carrying mortars. Th
e gun had been destroyed, its
crew badly injured, Bluey Iceton came back with his arm torn almost off. He and
the other injured men had
been bundled into a truck and sent off down the road. We wondered now, in the li
ght of Julius fate, how far
they had got.
But now more guns were being spotted and more violent attacks were being made on
the hard-pressed
infantry. The Jap attacked incessantly, sending in waves of fresh troops all thr
ough the days and nights, so that
the Australians got no respite and no sleep.
We drew what was left of our guns back a quarter of a mile, so that they would c
lear the crest of the hill in
front: chopped down hundreds of rubber trees "to hell with the five-dollar fine,
' the gun ners said, and laid
about them with their axes and sent over a heavy barrage, under cover of which,
we hoped, the infantry would
be able to fight their way back to us.
Eventually they did whereupon we learnt that the situation at the crossroads had
so fluctuated between the
time when the infantry had given us their position and the time when we had laid
down our barrage that most
of our shells had fallen among Australians. They bore it with incredible equanim
ity.
"Ah," they shouted, as they beat in a steady line through the rubber towards us,
"the bloody drop-short boysP
And when we realized what had happened and tried to tell them what we felt, they
just grinned and said:
"Don't matter, mate, gave us some en couragement to get back quicker. Would have
been up there yet if youse
hadn't hunted us out," and then they slouched off again in their long line, rifl
es outstretched, bayonets pointing
slightly down wards, tousled hair springing from under tin hats and sticking dam
ply to their foreheads. Only
the weary eyes told you what they really felt about this last unkind blow that h
ad added to the already fearful
toll of their numbers.
Having thus united into the one small force, we set off at once to fight our way
down the road until we
established contact once more with our own command and supplies. From Julius fat
e, and the fact that for
days no ammunition or food had reached us, we knew that this was not going to be
easy.
Consequently, all the vehicles the artillery's tractors and few guns: the infant
ry's trucks: the commandeered
cars and lorries (about fifty in all) ran nose to tail down the road. In the veh
icles were packed all our wounded
seven or eight, it seemed, to each truck. Onto tailboards, running boards, cabin
roofs and mudguards clutched
gunners and walking wounded. Along each side of the convoy, through the rubber,
in a plodding, purposeful
and determined fan, strode the infantry always with that outstretched rifle and
slightly down-pointed bayonet.
Every bush and shrub was prodded and cleared. Every sniper in every tree was sho
t down. Every small,
carefully concealed machine-gun nest was silenced. They made no fuss about it. T
hey just plodded alongside,
clearing our path, so that our whole unwieldy mass of men and machines ground fo
rward in low gear, mile
after mile, towards our goal.
We passed Julius truck, its flank riddled up and down and from side to side with
bullets: its inside ransacked.
Julius, and his driver, and his escort had been torn to pieces. A few yards fart
her pn the armoured car lay on
its side. At a forced-march pace, the entire column passed the spot and headed s
outh towards no one quite
knew what.
And every inch of the way the dive bombers roared up and down leaving us only to
refuel, when they would
return, flying lower, slower and more searchingly than ever. But for some obscur
e reason, they refrained now
from bombing our vehicles and were content only to spray the sides of the road w
ith their machine guns. This
lent an air of unreality to their presence, which was even more threatening and
disturbing than being bombed.
c< What the hell... ?" men queried, as they thundered overhead. And the wounded,
lying in the trucks in
bloodied heaps, would follow the course of the planes with their eyes eyes that
moved helplessly as they lay
there unable to move an inch if the planes should suddenly decide to shoot up th
e convoy. We crawled on.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
A cutting, long and deep, loomed ahead. In gnawing suspense we moved into it per
fect conditions for an
ambush and a mile later emerged, unscathed. We gunners heaved sighs of glorious
relief , but the infantry
plodded on like machines nothing made any difference to them!
The wounded were asking for water, which was given freely but with some anxiety
because when our bottles
were empty there would be no more purified water, and no means of purifying it o
ther than boiling it. With
their immense numerical superiority, the enemy gave no indication of allowing us
the time to sit down and
boil water.
An hour later we cleared the crest of a hill which sloped steadily downwards and
there, halfway down, was
the explanation of our lack of supplies for the last two days. B Echelon, the so
urce of all our food and
ammunition, lay there stark, dead, shattered. The group had been caught unawares
and wiped out.
Cooks were dead at the ashes of their fires. Accompanying in fantry lay scattere
d all around, their skins
blackening in the sun: trucks even as they had attempted to escape with their am
munitionhad been shot up. In
silence, we crawled past what had been B Echelon. A series of violent, desolate
scenes starred windscreens:
the dead crews: the clenched fist that protruded through the glass of a driver's
window: the sweet stench.
In silence we collected the few tins of food that the attacking Japanese had not
carried off. I moved a leg off a
case of bully beef and tried not to notice that it belonged to the most cheerful
driver in the regiment We broke
tihe case open and carted the contents out to our faithful infantry. Ten minutes
later the whole of our con voy
had passed the scene, rolling quietly downhill so that even the harsh grinding o
f Marmon Herringtons in low
gear was for once subdued. And as the first truck reached the bottom of the long
slope, the fierce yammering
of a machine gun broke the silence. It came from ahead, round a slight bend.
Automatically we moved off at the double to silence that yam mering, which could
hold us up indefinitely,
and give the enemy time once again to start mauling us from the rear. Quickly th
e infantrymen opened up with
their mortars onto the road block which lay ahead. The gunners persuaded relucta
nt officers to permit a
twenty-five-pounder to be fired off the macadamized road a pro cedure which the
textbook says is not good
because the spade on the trail might be damaged by the recoil against such an un
yielding surface.
Once again we witnessed a pleasant scene of aggression on our part. The mortar b
ombs clearly discernible in
the hard hot airflew up in a graceful arc like so many cricket balls. The twenty
-fivepounder cracked and
flashed viciously, raising an instant shower of torn timber and dust and smoke w
here its shells exploded
against the road block.
For a few seconds the yammering stopped and those of us who were closest to it s
eized axes from trucks and
ran, crouching low, up to the fallen trees which formed the barrier across the r
oad. While some chopped the
tree trunks, others chopped the Japanese who lay behind them: others still lashe
d out at the machine-gun crew,
now once again viciously firing. Beside me a youngster top pled backwards, his c
hest torn with bullets, into
the arms of his friend. The older man held the youngster protectively until he d
ied a few seconds later and
then, his blue eyes glittering, went rushing in again with his axe flailing.
In a matter of minutes it was over. We tossed the chopped-up sections of tree tr
unks aside, and the road was
once more clear. With some curiosity we surveyed the dead Japs. Not a pair of sp
ec tacles amongst the lot.
Every one a magnificent specimen of welldeveloped bone and muscle. Their equipme
nt sensible, adequate
and light. "Whackho for our Intelligence Reports," a voice com mented quietly.
One of the infantry officers came up and surveyed our axemanship dispassionately
. Rolling a Jap over with
his boot, he com mented: "Imperial Guards, eh," and hummed reflectively to himse
lf. Since Imperial Guards
meant no more to us than Imperial Bandycoots, we looked at him curiously. "Best
troops they've got, * he
elucidated and returned to his men.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Well, at least we know at last," Hugh remarked. "They can see which we were tol
d they couldn t. They can
fight which we were told they couldn t. And they're behind us for miles which we
were told they weren t."
With that, we returned our axes to the trucks from which they came and the convo
y, with renewed urgency,
started off again.
Night fell abruptly, as nights do in tropical countries, and still the retreat t
o some place where there would be
food and supplies con tinued. By now there was very little water left and the on
ly canned food was
unsweetened condensed milk. The wounded were itf an appalling state. On our flan
ks, barely visible, we
could hear the infantry pushing on firmly, hear the odd humming of a tune and, a
s a man tripped, the odd
swearing of words which had come to be even more soothing to our strained nerves
than music. For two hours
the trucks ground on in low gear at the same walking pace, whilst we peered ever
y second, with aching eyes,
into the darkness, only too well aware that here lay excellent country for an at
tack. Steadily the hills around us
flattened out.
"Getting near the Parit Sulong Causeway," Hugh muttered and I nodded agreement.
There was something
peculiarly ominous about the thought of that long straight stretch of road calle
d the cause way. Slightly raised,
it was flanked on either side by padi fields, so that, once on it, our convoy an
d its escort were irretrievably
com mitted to fighting their way right across. The same fear crept into every he
art Were the Japs, as well as
being hard on our heels, also at the other end of that causeway? Eyes peered mor
e anxiously than ever into the
blackness and for their pains saw nothing but the forebodings of their own minds
.
And then, at the same moment as the front truck swung into the flat country of t
he causeway, there came a
faint shout from the in visible infantrymen just ahead. "Road blown and flooded.
" The causeway either
bombed or mined by the enemy had, at its very start, become inundated by the wat
er from the padi fields on
either side and, to trucks driving under a complete blackout, seemed im possible
even to find, let alone
traverse. Instead of a roadway ahead, there lay only muddy water. Fifty trucks g
round to a halt.
"It's on!" Hugh muttered.
"For young and old," agreed Johnny Iceton.
Standing on the tailboard of our truck, we leant over the canopy, and, shoving a
round up the spout, laid our
rifles flat on the canvas and clicked off the safety catches. All down the line
of trucks, the carefully muffled
metallic snap of rifles being cocked and the click of safety catches coming off
broke the strained silence that
hung over the approach to the causeway.
"What's doing, mate?" one of the wounded men whispered from under the canopy.
"Nothing. Bloody nothing," Johnny told him. "That's the trouble."
"Got any water to spare? the same voice whispered. I shook my bottle empty. John
ny shook his empty*
Hugh's splashed hollowly so he passed it inside over the body of the man nearest
us, who was dead.
"Help yourself," lie said.
"Can you spare it all?" came the whisper. "There's nine of us in here."
"Sure," Johnny told him, looking sourly out over the rippling sur face of what h
ad been the causeway, "we got
plenty out here."
Far down the line of trucks a dying man groaned. Fireflies glowed momentarily in
the black void around us.
Some crickets with a warped sense of humour chirped cheerfully.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The whole convoy crouched still and waited in the darkness.
An elbow nudged me and an arm pointed. I followed the line of the arm, and, in m
y turn, nudged Johnny.
Ahead a red glow a mere pinpoint which was too still to be a fireflyshone in the
dark. Beyond it another.
Beyond that a third.
"Japs signalling," I thought and raised my rifle to take aim at the nearest red
glowwhich at once went out. All
the occupants of the leading trucks were doing the same. When next those little
lights came on quite a few of
the sons of Nippon were going to join their forefathers. It was rather a satisfy
ing thought
A figure hove alongside our truck and whispered urgently, "See those lights?" I
said, "Yes," and Johnny said,
"My bloody oath." "Drive between em," the figure ordered. "It's our blokes on ea
ch side of the roadway
drawing on fags. It'll be rough as guts but it's the best we can do" and with th
at he scuttled off to the next
vehicle.
Having extricated us from Muar and fought all the way from Barkri to Parit Sulon
g, our infantry friends were
not to be frustrated now by a few flooded breaches in a causeway. They had waded
out, found the edges of the
road by feeling for them with their feet, and now stood on either side stolidly
drawing on cigarettes held in
their cupped palms.
The leading truck needed no encouragement. There was a splash; for a moment it s
eemed to flounder, and
then it could be heard wading steadily through the water. Another followed, and
a third. And the next instant
we, too, were slopping our way down that dimly indicated lane. As the truck sogg
ed into each crater and the
engine protested violently at its watery reception, we manhandled it out again,
always led on by the friendly
warmth of a fag that glowed for one quick draw in a closely cupped hand.
For several miles this miracle of spontaneous organization was maintained. Someh
ow the path ahead
apparently just a featureless expanse of water was always indicated by those sil
ent infantrymen with their
cigarettes. And as we passed each had a word of praise to offer as if we and not
they were doing all the hard
work.
"Good on you, Dig," they would whisper and if you went over to where they stood
up to their knees in water,
they would at once say, "Here, have a drag," and thrust their cigarette firmly i
nto your hand.
Hour after hour went by. Splashing, floundering, shoving a few feet of dry road,
and then it all started again.
And just before dawn the first truck plodded up out of the padi water and onto t
he dry road that turned right
and led straight into Parit Sulong village. Like a dog shaking itself after a ba
th, the truck bounded wetiy off
and rounded the bend. Behind it, vanishing in two long files across the padi, it
left the infantry. Between these
files the bodies of about fifty trucks could be faintly discerned plodding on. I
t was an exhil arating moment. In
spite of every obstacle, we had escaped the trap. After ten days and nights of c
easeless fighting, and after sixty
miles of weary slogging, we were out. Though few words were spoken (and those on
ly in whispers), every
face was filled with elation,
"Thank Christ for that," Johnny murmured, "Be able to have a feed, a bath and a
sleep."
I leant under the truck's canopy to tell our wounded passengers the good news.
"How are you doing?" I asked.
"Fine..." "Couldn't be better..." came the answer. Men black with dried blood, t
heir faces and lips looking like
bits of boiled liver. I felt sick.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Have you in hospital soon," I said, and hurriedly pulled my head out again so t
hat I could throw up on the
roadside. Hugh looked sympathetic, knowing my squeamishness about blood. Johnny
grinned derisively*
"Bloody hero you turned out to be," he remarked in affable undertones, "you grea
t bronzed Anzac." I crawled
back onto the tailboard.
"Off my back," I told him, "you're lucky I didn't f aintl"
At the far end of the road, which turned right and ran into Parit Sulong village
, there was an arched bridge.
We had crossed it on our way up to Muar. It was perhaps a mile from the corner t
o that bridge. A mile of
perfectly straight road flanked on each side by rubber. Two minutes later the le
ading truck roared back. It was
badly shot up. The bridge, it reported, was strongly held by the Japanese.
So we hadn't escaped at all. After three or four furious bayonet charges against
the bridge, it also became dear
that we were not going to. It might be possible to swim that narrow river which
the bridge spanned and escape
as individuals; but the bridge itself was heavily defended with machine guns and
mortars and there was no
question of our capturing it and driving our trucks across.
This, then, was a death warrant for all the wounded men who lay in those trucks.
It was decided that the only
thing to do, rather than watch them slowly die as we fought it out, was to send
the worst cases in trucks up to
the bridge and ask the Japanese commander's permission to drive through his line
s back to our own main
force.
The Jap examined the passengers of each truck making sure that they were all men
who urgently required
treatment Then he gave his answer. Certainly they could pass through his lines i
f the entire remainder of our
force surrendered! Since the Japanese notoriously took no prisoners, this was no
t an altogether attractive
proposition. The wounded men themselves answered it ""We'll go back to the rest
and let them fight it out,"
they said. But neither is the Jap one to allow valuable bargaining weapons out o
f his hand simply be cause
they arrive under a flag of truce.
"No," he said, "you will stay her e while they fight" and with that the machine
guns and mortars opened up:
the battle was on again. Now we all knew why our vehicles hadn't been bombed the
previous day. The Jap had
hoped to capture them intact for himself.
By this time all these vehicles were out of the padi and standing nose to tail i
n that straight mile of road that
led to the bridge. Of our original Australian f otce of fifteen hundred at Muar,
some five hundred were left
They faced a kpown ten thousand (possibly more) who had food, water, ammunition,
automatic arms, strong
aerial support and tanks none of which things we had.
At the behest of Colonel Anderson of the infantry a gentleman who was awarded on
e V.C. (which seemed to
us quite inadequate) for his heroism every man who could crawl and carry a rifle
crept out of the trucks and
into the rubber. There they formed a deep, single-rank hollow square round the c
ore of vehicles and their
cargo of wounded men.
Our side of the square, thinly manned with one soldier every few yards, faced ba
ck the way we had come.
Whilst we scraped shallow holes with our bayonets in the glutinous black soil of
the rubber plantation, the
enemy troops pressed in. Fire from mortars was constant: snipers up trees made a
ny position but the
horizontal most uncomfortable: a splather of richocets off the road whined into
the rubber whenever the dive
bombers appeared. These we disliked even more than the bombs.
A few hundred yards back in the centre of the square some sig nallers attempted
to establish contact with our
own forces on the only field radio which still worked. Eventually they got throu
gh our urgent request for
small-arms ammunition and drugs and received the encouraging message that the Lo
yals were trying to fight
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
their way through to us from the other side of the bridge. Night fell with every
one cheerfully determined to
hold on if necessary forever.
With the arrival of darkness, however, our anxieties increased. Early bayonet ch
arges by the enemy having
failed, they began sys tematically to mortar the long line of trucks as well as
our own positions. The
ammunition limber of our only working twenty-fivepounder was hit and burst into
a most spectacular blaze.
Its explosion and the evil glare it cast behind us (silhouetting us quite clearl
y) caused the Japanese to shout
triumphantly from out of their circle of gloom. Fire poured in at us from all si
des, so that the small scraped-up
mounds of earth, and the rubber trees, behind which we lay, spurted dirt and lat
ex all over us*
The only cheerful event up to that time was that a young sub altern had released
the hand brake of each of the
trucks of wounded kept as hostages at the bridge and these had slid gently backw
ards, unnoticed in the
darkness, down the approach to the bridge, and were now once again within our pe
rimeter.
I lay between Hugh and Johnny. A few feet away Piddington was attempting to cont
ract his six feet two
inches into a depression no more than four feet in length. He wasn't very succes
sful, but it was giving him
something to do and he always liked being kept occu pied.
Another bayonet attack was repelled. After it we decided to take it in shifts to
sleep. The enemy paused for
thought.
We had been asleep for perhaps ten seconds it couldn't possibly have been more t
han ten secondswhen we
were pommelled into a terrified wakefulness again. Somewhere, something was wron
g. A strange noise
frightening because it was strange and menacing. One could feel the hairs tingli
ng at the back of one's neck;
and, still more, one could feel the electric anticipation that flashed round our
whole line. What bastardly were
the little monkeys up to now?
The problem quickly resolved itself. From a distant and ominous rumble accompani
ed by authoritative shouts
from the gloom on all sides one assumed the enemy to be passing orders from one
attacking group to another
the noise grew into the fast-approaching clat ter of heavy machinery. Tanksl And
then abruptly, into the now
fading circle of light cast by the burning limber, the first brute nosed its way
. Behind it one perceived,
vaguely, another; behind that others still.
So that was it. Having failed to break our line by direct frontal attack during
the day, and unable to locate it at
night, the enemy now proposed to taunt us into fire by examining our position fr
om a few feet off in which
case our whole line would be revealed; or to locate our exact position from the
turret of the tank and then
enfilade us into oblivion. They seemed to have it all their own way. Not a man m
oved a muscle. Not a sound
broke the silence that fell now as the tank halted and an insolently fearless he
ad ap peared from its turret to try
to draw our fire and so fix where our line lay. No one rose to the bait of that
head; no one fired; no flash told
the tank crew where we hid. The tank stood some forty feet away from us down the
road, and searched, and
waited. So did we, Who would break first?
Darkness and electric silence.
A voice whispering behind me suddenly removed my petrified gaze from the fateful
tank.
"Braddon," it said, "go with Moore, take hand grenades and get that tank out of
the way,"
Seldom had I heard a sillier suggestion. The officer who issued this order so ai
ry-fairily had been at school
with Moore and myself. To both of us, however, he seemed to be grossly overratin
g the significance of this
fact. Going to school was not, we both felt, at all adequate or reasonable groun
ds for ordering a grenade attack
on a tank. We were in the Army though, and there, it appeared,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
83 what was reasonable no longer applied. Perspiring with terror, we accepted th
ree hand grenades each, with
great ill-grace, and began to shorten the forty feet between us and the tank by
wriggling for ward on our
quivering bellies, writhing in the flickering shadows cast by rubber trees.
That forty feet had, when the tanks first appeared, seemed so short a distance a
s to be quite horrifying. It now,
as we left it, as sumed the proportions of something safe and respectable. I reg
ret to state that I wriggled with
a lack of speed that was only exceeded by my lack of conviction. Sydney's whispe
red "Good luck* and
Moore's mute glance of fellow feeling had in no way increased my strength of pur
pose. I had no love for this
strange consequence of the chance that had settled my place of education. Moore
was ahead of me. We were
both getting close enough to the menacing machine to have to give some serious t
hought to the means
whereby we were to deposit six hand grenades down the hatch and then, most impor
tant of all, depart with
sufficient speed to avoid annihilation.
There was the moment when, from our rear, a lone gunner chose to shout out: "cle
ar line; down in front."
Utterly amazed, Moore and I looked round. There, not more than twenty yards away
, working at the gun silhouetted
by the glare of the lurid fire, was a soli tary figure. With great deliberation,
he lined up the barrel
of the gun and in the absence of any sights looked along it. He was very careful
to take true aim. He was not at
all careful for himself. Sec onds ticked into minutes. He straightened up, appar
ently satisfied that his aim was
good. But, as a precaution, in case he missed, he went to the nearest truck and
found another shell.
Then, returning deliberately, he looked to see that his line was still clear, an
d fired. The blast from the gun
joined the blast from the tank as the shell hit it one long sheet of blinding fl
ame. From within the tank, as it
burst into flames, came shrill screams. Without further ado, Moore and I legged
it back to our line still too
stupe fied even to think.
The second shell, with scant respect for the might of Nippon, was dispatched the
way of the first and shattered
the next tank down the road (now well lighted up by the flames coming from its p
rede cessor). Those tanks
which lay farther down waited no longer, but turned and fled. Very sensible of t
hem. The solitary gunner had
now been joined by most of the crew, and they Were all raring for action, For th
e moment, then, we were safe
again. Everywhere the line hummed with whispered words about this miraculous sho
t from a semi-disabled
gun. Everywhere men reminded one another that the only other attempt to fire tha
t gun had resulted in the
instant death by machine-gun fire of the men who manned it There was no doubt in
any of our minds that if it
hadn't been for that one coldly calculated shot the enemy tanks would eventually
have run us to earth and
obliterated us all.
Piddington stammered in his excitement. "That was Jack Menzies fired that gun, w
asn't it?" he asked. Moore
and I both said, *Yes." We felt an overwhelming affection for Jack Menzies, even
if he hadn't been at school
with us. "Should get half a dozen medals," Sydney said. "Did you see him? Mad, h
e was. Took hours lining
her up. Mad. Should get a medal." Needless to say, he didn't some one else did,
but Jack didn t. Yet without
that shot no one would have left Parit Sulong and this story would never have be
en told.
Two infantrymen, who lay beside us, seemed to have enjoyed the whole incident mo
st thoroughly except for
the firing of the twentyfive-pounder, which they declared was "bloody orrible."
Hugh and I now suggested
that they should sleep for a while we would keep watch. They at once agreed and
immediately fell asleep,
lying on their backs with their he^ds pillowed in their tin helmets. Hugh and I
then decided to take it in turns
to watch, and Hugh, too, went to sleep. I was to wake hfm in an hour.
My hour's watch was not peaceful. Three trucks were set alight by mortar fire an
d the men in them incinerated
before anyone could lift them out. A few yards to the right the Japs attacked he
avily and were repulsed. Ahead
their officers shouted an order which was then relayed right round their positio
ns so that, as one followed the
sound of the voices, one realized just how securely we were encom passed. And th
e harsh bellows had barely
died down in that outer gloom when a vague figure flitted towards us, flitted fr
om tree to tree. At first I
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
thought it was merely a product of my imagination (which I knew to be fruitful).
When it was only three
rubber trees away I realized uneasily that it was, in fact, a Japanese soldier.
Terrified because of my
inefficiency with the bayonet (not to mention a natural tendency to terror anywa
y), I shook the two infantry
men and Hugh. But I might as well have shaken the tree behind me one does not aw
aken, after four days and
nights without sleep, at the mere shake of a hand. So, in desperation, I moved a
lone to the tree in front of me
and, as the Jap ran crouching towards it, stepped out from behind it and present
ed him with a firmly held rifle
and bayonet. Upon this he promptly impaled himself. At the moment of impact, as
I tucked my right elbow
securely against my hip and moved my left foot slightly forward, I found myself
thinking, "J ust like a stop
volley at tennis" and spent the next hour musing, rather confusedly, over the un
pleasantness of a situation
which compelled one to apply the principles of a clean sport to the altogether d
irty business of killing.
Daylight came. The victim of my stop volley lay with his mouth wide open showing
good teeth. I wished that
he would shut it. The burnt-out tanks squatted grotesquely on the roadside ahead
. And even as I surveyed
them, with a resentful stare, Johnny Iceton let out a howl of dismay as a sniper
whanged a bullet onto the
right-hand side of his tin hat Ten minutes later the same sniper whanged another
bullet onto the left-hand side
of his tin hat, and, to emphasize the point, shot the woodwork off the barrel of
my rifle, which I found
extremely unnerving. Half an hour later two mortar bombs warbled their way evill
y over towards our group.
One killed the infantryman on my right; the second landed, with great violence b
ut without exploding,
between Johnny's legs. Gazing with unashamed horror at his doubly dented helmet
and the bomb that stood
vertically on its nose between his knees, Johnny emitted a wail of anguish and d
emanded of the world in
general: "J esus Christ, what are they trying to do to me?" which provided the o
nly laugh of the day,
That was too much for Johnny. Standing up, he eyed us morosely. "Heartless mob o
f bastards you are," he
declared, "you'll be sorry though," he assured us. "I'm tired of the war on this
side of the perimeter. It's too
dangerous. I'm going to fight the war on the other side now," and with that he w
alked deliberately off, defying
the sniper, as he presented a broad young back and a cockily tilted though bent
tin hat, to hit him a third time.
A last message came through on our dying radio. The Loyals had been beaten back
in their attempt to fight
through to us. We were alone. Australia, it said, was proud of us which was nice
.
I crawled back to our truck determined to salvage a map out of it. The lanky Pid
dington had a compass. With
a map we could make our way through to Mersing on the east coast if our perimete
r was broken and we were
driven into the jungle. At Mersing we felt the fight would be on more equal term
s.
All nine men in the truck were dead and the map roll was badly perforated by bul
lets that had come down at a
steep angle machine-gunning from the air. I found the right maps and also, insid
e the roll, two tins of
condensed milk.
On the way back to what I now regarded as "my" side of the square, I passed clum
ps of wounded men lying
together smoking and dressing each other's injuries casualties of the night's ba
yonet raids, of the bombing and
sniping. Near the last clump I was amazed to see a fellow gunner raise a heavy B
oye's anti-tank rifle to his
shoulder, aim high and fire. He was at once flung yards backwards, whilst the ha
lf-inch shell most certainly
passed harmlessly into the stratosphere. When I reached him he was rubbing his s
hattered right shoulder and
swearing softly but with that consummate flu ency which is the prerogative of th
e Australian farmer who is
per petually harassed by the cussedness of things inanimate.
"What the hell are you trying to do, Harry?" I asked.
"Get that bloody sniper up the top of that bloody tree," he replied tersely. It
appeared that, fired off the
ground, the Boye's rifle had not sufficient elevation to hit a tree high up. How
ever, since the sniper fired from
behind the top of the tree trunk he could only be shot through it a Boye's rifle
was, therefore, essential for the
job. We decided to do it together. With the barrel resting on my shoulder, the b
utt against his own, Harry took
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
a long aim, appar ently quite undeterred by the bursts of bullets from all sides
which our stance attracted. I
was not in the least undeterred. In fact, as we stood there, our feet spread wid
e apart to take some of the shock,
I was very deterred indeed. Then Harry fired and I was crushed to the ground and
Harry was flung against a
tree and the sniper top pled gracelessly out from behind his trunk, thudding ont
o the earth below, and the j ob
was done. I left Harry, still swearing volubly and rubbing his shoulder, and cre
pt back to the line of men I now
knew so well. We opened one tin of milk with a bayonet and passed it along, from
outstretched hand to
outstretched hand, as each lay flat behind his little mound of earth, one mouthf
ul a man. It was very refreshing
our first meal since the previous midday when we had passed B Echelon. On that o
ccasion we had had the
same thing. It looked like becoming our staple diet.
The youthful infantryman who had spent the night on my left was hit in the right
thigh soon after I got back.
An angry blue line deep into the flesh indicated the path of the bullet. He said
nothing and kept on firing as
the leg oozed blackish blood.
In response to our last urgently radioed request for drugs and small arms, and a
erial support, the Air Force
proved the quality of botty its heroism and its equipment by lumbering up the ro
ad at treetop level in what
must have been the oldest biplane in the world still capable of becoming airborn
e. Unfortunately (probably
owing to the faulty functioning of our radio), the small arms and drugs were dro
pped very deliberately among
the Japanese, whilst, to provide aerial support, one very large bomb was deposit
ed with loving care into the
middle of our own perimeter. It f eU on a group of men at the edge of the road s
ignallers who were trying to
rig up another field radio. When the smoke cleared and the rubber leaves stopped
showering off blasted trees,
we gunners precipitately left the protection of the line to our most competent i
nfantrymen and doubled back to
where the bomb had fallen. Three rubber trees lay uprooted: a huge crater gaped
like a burst boil; and, of the
group of men who had stood there, all that could be discovered was one boot, one
shoulder blade and one tin
hat a tin hat with a dent on the right-hand side and another dent on the left-ha
nd side. Without a second's
hesitation, as I saw that doubly dented helmet, I lent over a bough of one of th
e uprooted trees and for the
second time in Johnny's presence threw up*
Stopping only long enough to collect a field dressing out of one of the trucks,
Hugh and I returned to the line.
We tied up the infantry man^ bluish thigh, which by this time seemed to have loc
ked itself and refused to
move at all. This done, we devoted our energies and attention to the enemy in fr
ont of us.
Mortars fired on us with increasing fury many of the bombs, we noted with pleasu
re, failing to explode. "Can't
have had their tem peratures taken or their bottoms wiped," Hugh explained.
The day wore on. Beards were noticeably longer, faces noticeably leaner and eyes
more sunken. Every man's
back and legs were splattered with black spots of congealed latex which had spur
ted from the bullet-torn
rubber trees under which we lay. I looked all along the line. Every man the same
. A detonation jolted me. Just
across the road a bakelite grenade had exploded under the ohm of one of the rein
forcements with whom Hugh
and I had returned to Barkri days before. As blood gushed out of a torn throat,
he said to his companion: "I'm
done for, Reg," and prepared stoically to die-- whereupon Reg said, "Like hell y
ou are," and, binding up the
throat so tightly that it could no longer bleed and its owner scarcely breathe,
he presented the patient with his
rifle and said: "Now get cracking." Looking chalk-coloured but determined, the w
ounded man did what he
was told. The next second he brandished his smoking rifle in the direction of th
e now defunct grenade thrower
and announced, in a most unchristian croak of triumph: "Got the little bastard"
which he indubitably had.
With the arrival of midday, it became obvious that very few men had more than a
handful of ammunition left
and that we could not hope to survive another night of tank-supported attack. Ou
r position had ceased to be of
any value in the over-all defence of the west coast. Using the small boats left
to them so thoughtfully by the
evacuees of Penang, the Japanese had landed at every port and inlet down the pen
insula, including one of the
southernmost towns Batu Pahat. We were now a hundred miles behind the main Japa
nese point of attack on
the west coast. Militarily we were valueless until and unless we rejoined the fo
rces in central Malaya at Yong
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Peng or those on the east coast at Mersing, there to fight again.
As against this point of view was an almost insuperable aversion to deserting th
ose of the wounded- who now
almost outnumbered the fit whom we could not take with us if we attempted to fig
ht our way out of our
encirclement.
A military decision was made. To fight on meant annihilation for all. To attempt
a break-through probably
meant the same thing, but doubtless came under the heading of "justifiable war r
isk." We were, therefore, to
endeavour to escape from Parit Sulong: the wounded would, after our departure, o
fficially surrender. We were
ordered to take all that we could in the way of equipment and our wounded compan
ions: to leave the line one
at a time, alternate men moving: to find our own way out through the Japanese li
nes and thence proceed
independently to any British position anywhere. The route and strategy of every
man was left to the decision
of the individual himself. Having for a year or more industriously trained us to
"do what we were told: not to
think," the military machine now cheerfully announced: "The order isEvery man fo
r himself." With men
leaving at about ten-second intervals, bearing rifles, hand grenades and compani
ons as they went, the line
rapidly thinned Most men headed towards the thickly timbered right flank and van
ished into it. After an hour
the entire perimeter was manned only by a small handful of soldiers, two machine
guns and one tommy gun
and still the Japanese failed to realize that their prize was slipping through t
heir fingers. The lanky Piddington,
the man on the nearest machine gun, Hugh and myself had decided to leave togethe
r. We would head for
Yong Peng fifty miles away in a straight line. Carrying the infantryman with the
bluish thigh, two rifles each
and the machine gun with shirts which bulged with hand grenades we ran, in short
bursts and crouched low, to
the right flank. We took a last horrified glance back at the area that had been
our battle ground and at the
clumps of wounded lying huddled round trees, smoking calmly, unafraid. Then we c
rawled into the heavily
wooded fringe of the plantation and left the fight behind. We wriggled half a mi
le on our stomachs under
dense vines and low foliage (dragging the rifles, the machine gun and the in fan
tryman behind us), and at last
after an hour's fearful progressconsidered ourselves outside the Japanese circle
. As Hugh cleared a small patch
of ground under the vine below while we crouched, I started unrolling the map. M
eantime the machine gunner
gazed contemptuously backwards towards the enemy: Well, how's their rotten f orm
?" he asked. "Millions of
*em and they let us all get out. Yer wouldn't read about it, would yer?" Nodding
our heads sol emnly, we all
agreed that you wouldn't read about it and returned to the more serious business
of the map and our route to
Yong Peng.
It appeared that between Parit Sulong, where we crouched in the undergrowth, and
Yong Peng, where we
hoped to find a British force, lay a fairly high mountain, an extensive swamp an
d a great deal of jungle. It was
about fifty miles.
By midnight, having kept at it solidly, we had covered about ten miles. By that
time we had met many odd
men and groups of men all heading steadily eastwards; and then, taking advantage
of our map and compass,
had joined us. We were then about forty strong.
We lay down to sleep when pouring rain made it impossible either to take a beari
ng or to read the compass.
Three hours later we woke and started off again in an agony of cramped muscless.
So painful was this period
that most men refused to rest again and remained standing whenever a halt was ca
lled to consult the map or
the compass.
An officer suggested blandly that the map would be of more value in his hands. T
hough we did not for one
second believe it, we handed the map over having first made a copy of all the da
ta we needed. Distances,
bearings, prominent features; the mountain, the swamp and river were all jotted
down in Piddington's
notebook.
"I'll lead," announced the officer.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
We reached the mountain. At its summit a track appeared. We followed it until, o
ver the crest, it forked.
"Right," said the officer.
"Left," said Piddington, as we checked the compass. We went left.
We entered the swamp. It was impossible there to carry both weapons and our woun
ded, so the weapons were
dumped in the brown water. Leeches battened onto limbs, swelled large and black
and then dropped off with a
plump plop into the swamp leaving a steady flow of blood where they had bitten.
Walking one moment on
floating logs, the next in water up to the waist, we covered an other five or si
x miles.
As we. emerged, enemy planes appeared low overhead, angrily searching for the pr
ey they had allowed to
escape at Parit Sulong. When they roared across our path, every man sank beneath
the sluggish brown water
and stayed there till he had either to surface or make his submersion permanent.
We were not seen. The hook
worms, one could not help feeling, were having a field day.
There was a patch of easygoing country for a few miles out of the swamp where ri
ce had been sown. We
marched across the raised track in the middle of the padi field. Every few minut
es the whole long file, now
about a hundred strong, had to sink into the water as more planes wheeled overhe
ad.
We passed out of the padi into more jungle. Another three hours of most unpleasa
nt travelling. Some men
were so exhausted that even their hand grenades had to be jettisoned. Feeling th
at they might still be needed, I
kept four down the front of my shirt: but we dumped the machine gun and our rifl
es and our.303 ammunition.
The jungle thinned and our party, now about one hundred and forty strong as men
seeped into it from all sides,
halted to discuss the next move. A hundred of the infantry decided against carry
ing on on our bearing to Yong
Peng which they maintained would already have fallen to the Japanese and announc
ed their intention of
resting for twelve hours, then detouring north of Yong Peng and heading for the
east coast The rest of us
carried on. Hunger, thirst and exhaustion had become obsessions.
The jungle vanished and, worse still, the swamps reappeared. At this the officer
with the map announced a
halt Hugh, Piddington, the machine gunner and myself, however, carried straight
on. We were not stopping
till we got to Yong Peng. In a few moments, having been joined by two others (on
e a gunner officer), the re
mainder of the party were lost to sight behind us and we were up to our necks in
water. Hugh and I, preferring
anything to this wading, began to swim. Piddington, with his superior height, st
ill waded. The other three
ploughed along behind.
A few minutes after leaving the remainder of the party behind us, we noticed sam
pans hidden in the
mangroves. Heading with a leisurely crawl towards them, we found them to be occu
pied by Malays, who
gazed at us very curiously indeed. We were in no mood to be gazed at curiously.
We had walked thirty miles
in thirty hours: we had not eaten anything for three days and very little for se
ven days: fate, we felt, had not
been kind to us and now Malay boat men looked at us curiously. Ignoring their in
hospitable gestures, we all
clambered aboard.
"Hullo, Joe," I said, "ada JapoonP Joe waggled his head dis interestedly from si
de to side. There were no
Japanese about, it appeared, "Thank Christ for that," commented the machine gunn
er; and Piddington, who
spoke no Malay at all, then leant over to the boatman and, dripping courteously
all over him, asked amiably.
"Apa changkol dua malam?" which means literally, "What hoe two night" and was th
e Australian's idea of the
greeting, "Whatho tonight?" The Malay stared at him coldly and replied, "Tidak t
au" He didn't understand.
We laughed and I told him what we wanted.
"Pigi Yong Peng," I said, and when the boatman looked a little mutinous about go
ing to Yong Peng, I took a
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
hand grenade from the front of my shirt, and Hugh examined his rifle, and the bo
atman at once ceased looking
mutinous.
We collected two other sampans and sent them back to the head of the swamp to co
llect the remainder of the
party. Then we made our way steadily and silently down narrow oily waterways, un
der leprous mangrove
boughs and jungle vines, until eventually we emerged from these slimy tunnels in
to a broad river.
There the planes searched again. But we hugged the high eroded bank and, with cl
umps of lalang grass
attached picturesquely to our tin hats, our clothing and our boatman, endeavoure
d to look as much like a bit of
Malaya as possible. We were scared frequently, but we were not bombed.
We drank many gallons of the river which grew steadily less brackish as we proce
eded. By duskthe fiery red
sort of dusk one would expect on the conclusion of a nasty episode in a nasty wa
r we had all lulled our
appetites with river water and our tired bodies grew relaxed with the peaceful m
otion of a sampan which is
paddled by someone else. We eventually drew into a canal off the river and the b
oatman pointed left. "Yong
Peng," he announced. We clam bered out and started walking.
A mile later we met a native. "J a poon," he hissed at us in terror and sped off
into the rubber. Another half
mile and we met an officer. "Yong Peng?" he said, in reply to our questions. "Ab
out six miles. It'll be held for
a couple of days. How many of you coming? You're the first." So our officer, whi
lst we congratulated
ourselves on being first out and, therefore, first due for baths, clothes and fo
od, told him, "A couple of
hundred" and was then struck by a thought.
"Someone should go back for that infantry party," he said. This proposition undo
ubtedly would have had
merit if it had been ad dressed to men who were not in the last stages of exhaus
tion; and if what the other
officer said about Yong Peng being held for another two days were true (which wa
s not really probable since
no such offi cial forecast had stood the test of time for at least six weeks now
) ; and if the infantry party
concerned had been the kind of gentlemen likely to be dissuaded from a carefully
considered decision by any
message which, when it reached them, would be at least twelve hours old. Since n
one of these conditions
existed, I looked at the speaker with complete lack of enthusiasm. I belonged to
the school of "If you get a
bright idea, do it yourself." He returned my look unmoved. He gave no indication
of doing anything himself,
but instead stared at Hugh. There was an unpleasant silence. I also belonged to
the school of "If there's an
unpleasant silence, for God's sake say something, even if it's silly." So did Hu
gh. We said something very silly
indeed. "We'll go," we said, and next instant the officer having promised us gui
des who would be left to await
our return at that position where we then stood: and having been bid an almost s
entimental au revoir by the
three other men "See you in Singapore," they said Hugh and I were heading back d
own the track again.
Heading west, into the angry sunset, away from Yong Peng.
"Wars," said Hugh, "are bloody stupid." I could not have agreed more.
The boatman was reluctant to return up the river. I produced my hand grenade aga
in. We started up the river.
As we slipped through the quiet, oily water, Hugh and I discussed, with some ran
cour, the last words we'd
heard: "See you in Singapore."
"Think we will, Hugh? I asked him. He looked tired and, for the moment, didn't s
eem to care whether we did
or not. "What do you think?" he asked.
I said optimistically that I was sure we would, and then added, more honestly: "
But I think we'll be hoofing it
all the way. I don't see us getting to Yong Peng before the Nips."
Hugh looked greatly depressed at the prospect of walking all the way to Singapor
e. "If we do have to," he
finally summed it up, "we've got to have a ruddy great sleep and a dirty big fee
d first," and with that he
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
proceeded to put the first part of his programme into immediate effect.
We reached the head of the swamp, passing again through the dank tunnels of mang
rove, finding them just as
bewildering as be fore. Then, after crawling through the mud, we marched for som
e hours up the same track
we had so recently descended until halted by a voice out of the gloom, which cha
llenged us in tones that were
not to be disputed. We gave our names.
"Never heard of you," the voice answered disagreeably, andstill more disagreeabl
y clicked back an invisible,
though clearly audible, safety catch. We hurriedly quoted the names of every foo
tslogger we had ever known
in an urgent attempt to endear ourselves to this unseen and obviously unfriendly
sentry. Finally, he said: "All
right, come on." So we went forward again.
We asked for the officer in charge. We told our story. We told him the report th
at Yong Peng would be held
for another eighteen hours. We told him the way there.
He called us bloody fools to come back; pointed out that his party had made it c
lear that their decision had
been final not to go to Yong Peng, and reaffirmed that decision. Then, a little
more sympa thetically, he asked
why we had come back. One could hardly say, "Because there was an unpleasant sil
ence," so we just said,
"For the walk it's a nice evening," and left.
No one ever saw that party again and the presumption is that they met the enemy
in force somewhere on their
wide detour of Yong Peng and were wiped out
We staggered back to the swamp. Hugh, still weak from his long illness in hospit
al just before the events of
Muar, was now com pletely exhausted. He needed sleep and food but most of all sl
eep and he needed them at
once. I felt heartless as I kept dragging Trim along, refusing to allow him to l
ie down. Intuitively, though, I
felt that only a terrific effort could get us to Yong Peng before the Japanese.
We pressed on.
We got back to the sampans and this time I arrived flaunting two hand grenades,
which must have made their
impression, because we set sail at once. Down through the evil tunnels, now mist
y and dank: out into the
moonlit river: down to the canal. I woke Hugh and we started walking.
Twice he feU to the ground sound asleep. Each time I "woke him, dragging him up,
almost hysterical myself.
"We've got to get to those guides," I told him, "before if's too late." "Blast t
he guides," he replied, "I want to
sleep."
The third time he fell I couldn't wake him. No amount of shaking stirred him. We
still had about half a mile to
go to the point whence we had started back. I lost my head and my temper and kic
ked him. He groaned and
stood up. With his arm round my neck and mine under his armpit, we staggered up
the path. "Sorry, Hugh," I
said.
"Doesn't matter, Russ," he replied, "how much farther?
"Not far," I said, "you'll be right."
Thus we readied our departure point. Hie moon had gone. It was very dark. The tr
ack was completely
deserted. There were no guides there no one. Only mosquitoes and the croaking of
frogs.
We sagged to the ground without a word and instantly Hugh was dosing. As he was
drowsing off , Hugh, in
tones of utter indifference, asked what would happen if the Nips came.
"Maybe they'll think we're dead," I said, hopefully.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Close enough to it, anyhow," Hugh muttered, and I put his head in his tin hat,
pillow-wise; adjusted my own
tin hat in the same way; placed a grenade ready by his side and three by my own
and, in another second,
joined him in the bliss of unconsciousness.
We were awakened, it seemed, almost immediately, A glare fell into my eyes and,
filled with wild terror, I
grabbed at the grenades by my side. I could see nothing beyond that glare. I rem
embered the native who had
said "Japoon" an( i scuttled off into the jungle. I remembered that the guides p
romised us so faithfully by the
officer had vanished. Now this glare: and I was very frightened indeed because i
t came from a powerful torch
held inches from my face, while I lay helpless on my back and beside me, still s
ound asleep, lay Hugh.
And then a surprised voice said, "It's Braddon and Moore,' and the moment of ter
ror passed. There were seven
of them Australians and we joined them, now sufficiently rested to attempt the l
ast six miles to Yong Peng,
using the torch to find the faint track.
It was only when we had covered about three miles and the sky was beginning to l
ighten with the false dawn
that I remembered that my four grenades still lay on the track at the canal wher
e we had slept. Carefully I put
the thought away from me that they would ever be needed. No one else ip our smal
l band had any arms.
We reached the road which led down into the town at dawn. What we saw was not pr
etty. Many dead in the
foreground and, at the bottom of the hill, a shattered bridge and thousands of m
illing i?ien in a uniform that
was not familiar.
"Japs!" announced one of our party. I looked at him and nodded. He should know,
I thought, recognizing him
as Harry the gentle man who shot snipers out of trees, using anti-tank rifles fr
om the standing position.
From the bottom of the hill the Japs shouted at us rudely. We did not stop to ar
gue but quickly crossed the
road and ran into the rubber. There was not much time to make plans.
Our party now consisted of three gunners, one officer, one ser geant, two signal
men and two infantrymennine
in all.
"Where to now?" demanded one of the infantrymen,
"Singapore," three of us answered simultaneously.
"How far's that?" demanded the same infantryman.
"About a hundred miles," said the officer.
"Jesus," said the second infantryman, a gentleman who for some obscure reason sp
orted not boots but
sandshoes, "I couldn't walk that far."
"Then you bloody better crawl," Hugh told Tiim curtly (Hugh did not suffer fools
gladly), with which we
started off on the second leg of our trip from Parit Sulong.
We passed an open, mass Japanese grave which made us feel a little better. Then,
as the sun rose higher, we
passed heaps of British bodies and the air swam with humidity and the stench of
death. Next we came to an
abandoned native hut I broke in and found a tin of condensed milk crawling with
ants and half empty. We
scooped out a finger-tipful of milk and ants each. As we started off again, two
Tamilsrubber tappers appeared
a few hundred yards ahead. They halted, startled, for a second as they saw us, t
hen padded swiftly off over the
hill, their sarong-clad hips swaying and their bare feet splayed wide.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
We worked on a "two-man-ahead patrol" systemon the All Clear from them the remai
ning seven moved up,
whereupon the next two took over. Thus we leapfrogged for about two hours. Hugh
and I patrolled together:
Harry and the first infantryman, called (we now learnt) Here: the two young sigs
: and the sergeant and
Sandshoes.
The latter pair were now ahead. We waited for their "All Clear."
"Pair of no-hopers, they are," declared Harry acidly, as he lay with his feet re
sting high up against a rubber
tree, "done nothing but bellyache ever since we started."
There was a moment's silence whilst everyone thought of the undoubted degree of
the no-hopers* capacity for
bellyaching.
*O.K.," said one of the sigs, "she's dear up ahead." We looked up and saw the se
rgeant waving us forward.
Harry got to his feet and Here with him. Roy and Rene, the sigs, followed with t
he officer. Hugh and I
brought up the rear. As fast as possible we walked forward to where the two bell
yachers waited and then on
along their patrolled beat We had covered perhaps fifty yards of it when we clea
red the first small rise in the
rubber. The jungle lay cosily by our left hand. We trotted down the far side of
the rise. And instantly the air
was full of bullets, whilst ahead of us and to our right about fifty yards away,
with automatic weapons blazing,
were Japanese soldiers. We had walked straight into an ambush. The bellyachers h
ad funked their patrol,
I didn't wait to see what happened. I was off at once, sprinting wildly, towards
that jungle on the left Beside
me, I was aware without seeing him, ran Hugh. Cursing myself for every fool in t
he world, I thought
yearningly of those four beautiful hand grenades now lying uselessly beside a ca
nal the other side of Yong
Peng.
"Stop there," I heard the officer's clear voice directed at us, "stop and surren
der or well all be shot" and my
absurd Army training made me falter for a second and look back. I saw Here alrea
dy bleeding from a wound
in the arm; and Sandshoes and the sergeant lying on the ground; and the officer
standing quite still, the sigs
looking at him questioningly and Harry in outrage. Just for a second we faltered
. As in any race, when one
falters, it was then too late. The path to the jungle was cut by a Jap soldier w
ith a tommy gun. We stood still,
our only chance lost Then, very slowly, very foolishly and with a sense of utter
unreality, I put up my hands.
At that moment all that occurred to me was that this procedure was completely di
sgraceful. I have not since
then changed my mind. I have no doubt at all that I should have continued runnin
g. One does not win battles
by standing still and extending the arms upwards in the hope that one's foes hav
e read the Hague Convention
concerning the treatment of Prisoners of War, It was unfortu nate that the Army
had trained me sufficiently
neither to disobey instantly and without hesitation, nor to obey implicitly and
without compunction.
Accordingly, I had done neither: and I now stood in the recognized pose of one w
ho optimistically seeks
mercy from a conqueror whose reputation is for being wholly merciless.
The enemy patrol closed in on us. Black-whiskered men, with smutty eyes and the
squat pudding faces of
bullies* They snatched off our watches first of all and then belted us with rifl
e butts be cause these did not
point to the north as they swung them around under the ludicrous impression that
they were compasses. They
made dirty gestures at the photographs of the womenfolk they took from our walle
ts. They threw the money in
the wallets away, saying, "Damm6, dammA, Englishu dollars *: and, pointing at th
e King's head on the notes,
they commented: "Georgey Six number ten. To jo number one!" And all the time two
Tamils stood in the
background, murmuring quietly to one another, their hips tight-swathed in dirty
check sarongs and their
wide-splayed feet drawing restless patterns in the bare soil of the rubber plant
ation^
"Done a good job, haven't you, Joe?" demanded Harry savagely but they wouldn't m
eet his eye. Just kept on
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
drawing in the dirt with their toes.
Hugh picked up a ten-dollar bill and stuffed it defiantly back in his pockets. T
hen they tied us up with wire,
lashing it round our wrists, which were crossed behind our backs and looped to o
ur throats. They prodded us
onto the edge of a drain in the rubber. We sat with our legs in it, while they s
et their machine guns up facing
us and about ten yards away.
"That bloody intelligence officer would have to be right this time of all times,
wouldn't he?" demanded Harry
we all knew that he referred to the "Japanese teke no prisoners" report, and Her
e, bleeding badly, nodded
rather wanly.
"We must die bravely," said the officer desperately at which the sergeant howled
for mercy. Howled and
pleaded, incredibly craven. Neither he nor Sandshoes had been hit at all when I
had seen them prostrate on the
ground, merely frightened. The sergeant continued to bawl lustily. We sat, the n
ine of us, side by side, on the
edge of our ready-dug grave.
The Japanese machine gunner lay down and peered along his barrel. It was ray twe
nty-first birthday and I was
not happy.
At the first long volley of shots I jerked rigid, dragging my right wrist out of
its wire binding, but
experiencing no emotion other than a faint surprise that I was still alive. A se
cond volley rang out, and still the
anticipated tearing of bullets into flesh was absent. Then I looked up and reali
zed that the machine gun was
firing not at us in the trench but up the slight rise at a solitary figure who d
ashed across the sky line. Japanese
soldiers were farming quickly out through the rubber and his flight was obviousl
y hopeless. In a few moments
he was dragged down the hill to where we sat. He was an officer of our regiment,
fair-haired, tall and lean.
They tied him up with his own puttees, at which he protested indignantly. He wor
e that most useless of all
weapons, a.45 revolver. His captors quickly took it from him.
Under cover of all this, I had untied Hugh, and he the sigs, and they were about
to unloose Sandshoes, when
the sergeant noticed what Was happening and let out a wail of terror which got u
s all lashed up again, this
time with a narrow, cutting rope. I was begin ning not to love the sergeant.
The Japanese, of whom there were about fifteen, held a confer ence. They were sq
uat, compact figures with
coarse puttees, canvas, rubber-soled, web-toed boots, smooth brown hands, heavy
black eyebrows across
broad unintelligent foreheads, and ugly battle hel mets. Each man wore two belts
one to keep his pants up and
one to hold his grenades, his identity disc and his religious charm and when the
y removed their helmets, they
wore caps, and when they took off their caps, their heads had been shaved until
only a harsh black stubble
remained. They handled their weapons as if they had been born with them. They we
re the complete fighting
animal.
Mopping his forehead with the silk scarf which they all carried some painted wit
h Rising Suns, others with
dirty pictures their leader surveyed us morosely and idly waved the revolver he
had taken from our latest
recruit. They conferred in low voices of a pleasant tone, which contrasted strik
ingly with the screams and
bellows they invariably used when speaking to us.
The leader addressed us, his left hand resting proudly on the hilt of a cheap-lo
oking sword, his right clutching
the revolver. He spoke little English.
"You," he said, pointing to Roy, "age-u?" Roy looked blank, so I told him that t
he little ape wanted to know
how old he was.
"Twenty," said Roy.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Twenty-ka?" queried the leader and looked most surprised.
"You?" he said, pointing to Hugh.
Twenty," said Hugh.
"You?" continued the Jap to Rene.
Twenty," said Rene.
"You?" he demanded of me.
"Twenty-one," I told him. He muttered to himself, then turned to his men and inf
ormed them, with a
contemptuous gesture at us, "Ni-,'tt." They all registered astonishment.
"Baby," he said. "Twenty no good. Nippon soldier twenty-four. Nippon soldier Num
ber One, Englishu soldier
Number Ten,"
"Balls," replied Hugh, whereupon the Japwho did not under stand the word but cou
ld not mistake the
inflection hit him with the butt of the revolver.
"You," he pointed at me, "wife-u-ka?"
"No wife,' I told him.
"Baby-ka?" he persisted.
"Not even any babies," I assured him. He hit me with the revolver butt. He asked
Rene and Roy the same
questions; they gave the same answers and received the same treatment. Harry, sh
ort, confident, and thirtyish,
watched all this with his shrewd farmer's eye.
"You," the Jap asked him, "wife-u-ka?"
Harry, the bachelor, smiled his crooked smile. "Yeah," he said boldly.
"Yes?" questioned the Jap, delighted.
"Sure," said Harry: and then, driving home his advantage, added: "Three wives an
d eight babies."
This information was received with open admiration by all the Japs, who at once
made many lewd gestures in
Harry's direction and gave him a cigarette, placing it carefully in his mouth. H
arry continued to smile we had
learnt our first lesson in Japanese psychology.
Our execution, apparently, was for the moment forgotten. Taking a long swig at h
is round water bottle, the
leader suddenly declared: "All men come," and, putting his cap and helmet back o
nto his bristly skull,
prepared to move off. Emboldened by the cigarette gift, Harry asked could we hav
e some water. The Jap did
not understand. "Water," repeated Harry, and nudged with the elbow of his lashed
up arm at his own empty
water bottle.
"Misuwa nei" bellowed the Jap, and all admiration for Harry's matrimonial prowes
s vanished hit him with the
revolver butt, at which Harry smiled more crookedly than ever and we all grinned
at Harry. "Come,' said the
Jap, "all men come"; so we were prodded upright with bayonets and then set out o
n what was to be a long and
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
rather unpleasant march.
We were used as pathfinders through a minefield: we passed am bushed British amb
ulances packed with men
who had been only slightly wounded and had been slaughtered as they lay there, t
heir drivers still clutching
the wheel: we marched briskly all day a day of harsh heat during which we were a
llowed no water and no
rests.
Japanese bombers roared low overhead and our captors took their scarves, the fla
g ones and the dirty ones,
and waved them at the planes which then roared off again, satisfied. At about fo
ur in the afternoon our captors
sat down under a banana tree to eat. We were kept standing in the sun on a hard-
baked track which ran
through the small clearing. We were not guarded with much attention. On the othe
r hand, we were too
securely shackled, hand and foot, for all of us to unloose ourselves and escape.
Since we had agreed that only
a joint escape attempt would be made that subject had, for the moment, to my fur
y, to be dropped. I seized the
opportunity, though, whilst the Japs were preoccupied with refreshments, to pull
my wrists free and untie my
ankles. Then, when the Malay who had brought the Japs their cooked food reappear
ed, I walked down the
track to meet him and, giving him my empty water bottle, de manded that he fill
it. He refused. Water by this
time, though, had become essential. I was sufficiently lightheaded to make murde
rous advances at the old man
rather than let him pass me on that hardbaked track and reach the security of th
e banana tree where the
Japanese sat.
"Ayer," I snapped at him, "Ayer! Ayer lacas [Water... and quickly!"] As I raised
my voice, the other men
looked anxiously at me, and the Japs themselves raised their eyes from their ova
l mess tins and watched
intently.
They're on to you, Russ," Hugh warned, "better skip itl" The sergeant, heroic to
the last, shouted: "Come back
here, you silly little bastard. You're drawing the crabs for the rest of us. Com
e back here," But water was now
my main interest in life and nothing would have given me more pleasure than to d
raw all the crabs in the
world on my friend the sergeant. "Ayer, Joe,* I demanded again, "Ayer" and thrus
t the water bottle at him. He
reached out, took the bottle and returned a few moments later with it filled.
I walked back to the rest and fed them two mouthfuls apiece, taking care to atte
nd to the sergeant last each
time. When the Japs had tossed us a coconut at noon, the sergeant, whom I had ju
st untied, had grabbed it. He
had drunk all its juice at a draught. We were not going to be caught like that a
gain. So I now went from man
to man holding the bottle to his mouth a procedure necessary with the others onl
y because their hands were
still lashed behind their backs until aU the water was gone.
The whole operation was watched, in venomous silence, by the Japs. Now that it w
as completed and I had
nothing to do, I felt terror-stricken by the fact that I was so obviously unshac
kled. I could feel my right eyelid
twitching and I had a frantic desire to drop my eyes from the long gaze of the l
eading Jap. On the other hand, I
felt certain that if I did my number would be tip. So ap parently did Hugh. "Sti
ck to him, Russ," he muttered.
Desperately I stuck and after another interminable ten seconds the little Jap tu
rned away, apparently, of a
sudden, quite disinterested.
He spoke, once again in that pleasant undertone they used among themselves, to o
ne of his men. That
individual rose to his feet, did up his fly buttons, put on both his belts, mopp
ed his skull and placed on it first
his cap, then his helmet, and then walked slowly towards me. Quite dispassionate
ly he tied my wrists behind
my back again, looped the rope around my throat and down to the wrists once more
. Then he ordered the
sergeant over and joined the loose end of my rope to the knot which secured his
wrists. Then he dragged the
two of us to Hugh and tied Hugh to the other side of the sergeant. The other sev
en men were tied up in a three
and a four. Then he re turned slowly to the banana tree, took off his helmet and
his cap, removed his two belts,
undid his fly, sat down again in the shade. For twenty minutes they murmured qui
etly among themselves and
examined the paintings on their scarves. Then they rose we were on the march aga
in.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
After a few miles the sergeant found progress easier if, every now and then, he
took both his feet off terra
firma and we carried him. By now I hated him as I had never hated in my life bef
ore. Not only was he heavy
to carry, but the sudden jolt of his weight on the thin rope when he lifted his
feet cut our wrists and sawed at
our throats. Undoubtedly, from his point of view, his theory was a good one. I,
however, found it disagreeable
and Hugh was pale with pain.
"Drop the bastard," advised Harry from behind. We warned him, Hugh and I, that i
f he persisted we would
free ourselves and wring his bloody neck. He laughed, a little madly, and said w
e would never ditch a fellow
Australian and then swung more lustily than ever. Hugh warned him again. Then, w
hen next he lifted both
feet off the earth, I tore my wrist free. The loosed rope snaked round my throat
and the sergeant thudded to the
ground.
The march stopped abruptly. As the Japs crowded round the Sergeant, who lay kick
ing childishly on the track,
I stepped over to Hugh and separated his bonds from those of the fallen man. Hug
h straightened up.
The sergeant refused to get up off his back, so the Jap leader asked would Hugh
and I carry him. I made the
first adult decision of iny life. I said, "No." The sergeant screamed that we wo
uldn't dare let him lie there and
the Jap indicated his intention of shooting him if he did not either get up or f
ind someone to carry him at once.
Since Hugh and I were the only two untied, we were obviously the only two who co
uld carry him. The Jap
glanced at me. I said, "No."
The Jap unholstered the revolver he had taken from our second officer. He glance
d at me again, enquiringly.
Again I moved my head negatively. Holding the pistol within a foot of the sergea
nt's stomach, he fired. The
sergeant twitched the Jap fired four more times. Hugh was suddenly very white an
d shivered, although there
were little beads of sweat on his upper lip. "He's dead," he said. The others sa
id nothing. "Goodl" I told him.
As the ropes were tied round my wrists again, I reflected grimly that for once i
n the pres ence of death I did
Dot feel sick. I supposed that I was growing up. I decided that I had been nicer
when I was young.
We marched the rest of that day and much of the night in grim silence. Marched w
ith a speed and sureness
that were astounding. We did not once see a road: we were usually in jungle: whe
n we did hit a clearing, it
came as no surprise to the Japs, who were instantly greeted by a Malay who had h
ot food ready. This clock
work organization of fifth-column sympathizers and the timetable marching was al
most incredible when one
realized that the Japs who guarded us had been in Malaya only six weeks and that
they had spent the previous
seven years fighting in China. It was explained only, when one saw their cheap w
rist compasses (strapped on
like watches) and the map by which they marched a map which ignored all main rou
tes and gave only creeks,
padi tracks, jungle pads, native huts. Every minute detail was there. Where our
British maps would have
marked nothing but jungle and a few contour lines, these Japs marched according
to a plan that looked like a
route through London. Every yard of their progress had been charted by twenty ye
ars or so of Japanese tailors,
photographers, launderers, planters, miners and brothelkeepers in the period bef
ore the war. Now those years
of work bore the fruits that were desired of them in the sure passage through th
e Malayan wilderness of this,
and a thousand other, roving Japanese patrols.
At midnight we halted and the patrol slept leaving us always heavily guarded. It
was unnecessary. We slept,
too. Nothing could have kept us awake not even being trussed together, all nine
of us, into an immovable and
inflexible lump of humanity. At dawn we were off again. The Japs had washed, eat
en and drunk but.we
received nothing.
At midday we passed a large formation of bicycle troops. They carried small mort
ars, civilian clothes, mortar
ammunition and rifles. We were severely manhandled and each of us was punched an
d kicked a hundred
times. In addition, some of us had our boots taken from us and marched, thencefo
rward, barefooted. The
jungle is not kind to those who walk in bare feet.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Five times we managed to untie every man but one when we could have attempted es
cape. And five times we
were observed, thrashed and tied up again. Sandshoes suddenly declared that he w
ould have no part in any
future attempt: he would, he said, stay captured. I was all in favour of abandon
ing him: the officers with us,
however, were more humane and urged us to wait for better opportunities.
We passed another group of bicycle troops. They had just been shot up by our art
illery. The sound of our own
gunfire rejoiced our hearts and we prepared to make our run for it. Six of us we
re already marching with our
hands held behind our backs but quite free. Rene was just untying Roy's bonds. T
he stage seemed set though
not even I felt that we had much chance. And at that moment we were herded into
the very midst of the
bicycle troops and chaos ensued. We were kicked, punched, slugged and slashed. B
oots, rifle butts, bayonets
and swords came at us from every angle. We were all bloody when we emerged at la
st from the gauntlet.
Hugh's arms gaped widely where he had warded off a sword blow.
As we stood there, licking our wounds, there came another on slaught and we were
kicked into the padi water.
We seized this opportunity to take a drink. Then we were all tied up afresh and
kicked into the padi again.
When nine men are bound together hand and foot and thrust face downwards into th
ree feet of water, it
requires considerable mutual confidence and co-operation not to drown. With the
exception of Sandshoes, the
men who were with me in that predicament behaved like heroes we emerged a trifle
waterlogged but alive.
Another three hundred yards of screaming hatred and the ordeal was over. We marc
hed out of the padi,
leaving the bicycle troops behind us, and came to a road our first since we had
seen the ambulances at Yong
Peng. The Japs halted to study their map and we took advantage of the delay to t
ry and stop the wound in
Hugh's forearm from bleeding.
This first aid was barely completed when we were kicked to our feet again and we
then marched till midnight,
when we came to another road. There the nine of us were incarcerated in the chic
ken coop designed for as
many chickens. On either side of the road were vast numbers of enemy troops. Our
chicken coop adjoined a
small copra drying shed of galvanized iron and a bungalow of weather board. The
road lay twenty yards away.
Sandshoes complained that he had an uncomfortable position. To shut him up and t
o be nearer Hugh, I
changed places with him. We slept till morning, a guard facing into our coop, hi
s bayonet inches only from
our faces.
A few hours after we wakened, all hell broke loose outside and we realized that
a battle was raging on the
road. Bullets tore through the chicken coop. One hit Sandshoes in the thigh Sand
shoes, who sat in my place!
He moaned and screamed, so the Japs took him outside and bayoneted him.
The battle died down. Thirty prisoners the only survivors of an entire convoy, a
nd most of them wounded
were brought in. We were joined with them and flung into the small red iron copr
a shed, which was about ten
feet square. There we stayed for two days.
During those two days the more serious wounds went gangrenous and the packed she
d stank with the stench
of living death. The man on my right had his jaw shot away from just below his e
ar down to his chin. He was
hideous to look at and the flesh, like greenish lace at the raw edges, stank swe
etly,
"Am I very badly disfigured?" he asked anxiously he had be come engaged just bef
ore leaving England and
his looks were important to him. Hugh looked him full in what remained of his fe
arful face and declared:
"You're as beautiful as ever." Hugh was fair-haired and young. He could look ext
raordinarily angelic at times.
He did so now, his eyes gentle and his smile reassuring. The horror leant back c
ontent.
During those forty-eight hours we received one lot of waterabout three mouthfull
s each and four coconuts, I
managed also to scrape in, through a hole in the wall, a double handful of flybl
own rice off the Japs' garbage
heap. This worked out at a spoonful each. We ate some of the drying copra but, t
hough it makes good oil, it
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
can hardly be described as appetizing. Dysentery broke out, which was awkward.
The new prisoners were all either English troops or Malay volunteers and were ma
gnificent in their courage.
During the night quite a few men were chosen by torchlight for questioning mainl
y on the use of gas, about
which none of us knew anything. They were taken outside and then, in the semi-gl
oom, just visible through
the hole in the wall, stabbed and bashed to death. They died shouting defiance.
At the end of the forty-eight
hours those of us who were left were herded into a truck one of ours captured in
the ambushed convoy and
driven off. We stood in sticky blood and the road on both sides for ten miles bo
re witness to the fury with
which British troops had fought the enemy. No Japanese bodies remained they were
always swiftly removed
but the corpses of our own men lay every where, blackening and bloating in the s
un like cattle in a drought.
The truck stopped suddenly. The driver had noticed an old Chinaman standing on t
he edge of the road. He
was very old indeed and senile. The driver leapt out and with two other Japs bat
tered him viciously. His cries
brought more Nipponese troops to the scene. Soon there were hundreds. They decid
ed to make a day of it and
their preparations were soon complete. They set fire to the old man's head. As h
is hair blazed and he screamed
the sort of screams that only burning men can scream they offered him water with
which to extinguish the
flames. When he seized the can of water it was boiling. He flung it over his hea
d. The flames hissed out and
he screamed even more piercingly. Petrol was poured onto the roasted scalp: a ma
tch applied: more boiling
water offered. It was quite some time after he expired that the Japanese laughte
r and excite ment died down.
Rather like an English crowd at the conclusion of a closely fought football matc
h.
"Apif" they shouted in Malay to one another. "Api: ayer panas. Api: ayer panas [
Fire: hot water. Fire: hot
water],'
Chattering gaily, our driver got back into the truck. With a grind of gears and
a jolt as the clutch was let
carelessly up, we were on our way again.
We reached Ayer Hitham, where the superficially wounded were given some inadequa
te treatment by the
Japanese and the seriously woundedincluding The Face were, we presumed (for no o
ne ever saw them again),
killed off. We slept the night in a school which reeked of death. In the morning
one of the English soldiers pro
duced a safety razor and a blade. About thirty of us shaved with it. There was a
well in the schoolyard which
provided water for shaving and bathing and (in spite of rumours of a corpse in i
t) drinking. We were
questioned, beaten up and moved to Batu Pahat*
At Batu Pahat we were questioned, beaten up and moved to Gemas. At Gemas we were
questioned, beaten up
(with especial fury because there the Australian 2,'30th Battalion had staged a
particularly successful ambush)
and put into a cattle truck on a train. In all that time we had eaten only a few
spoonfuls of rice. We had now
been ten days with virtually no food at all and eight of us had marched about a
hundred and eighty miles in
that time. It had become physically impossible any longer to attempt escape.
The train stopped thirty-six hours later at a bomb-wrecked station which the Mal
ay Volunteers told us was
Kuala Lumpur. We were marched from the station through the city; and the march w
as made unforgettable by
the stoning and spitting meted out by a native population which had only a fortn
ight before been hysterically
pro- British. Also, there were the crops of Chinese heads that were stuck up obs
cenely on stakes at every
intersection symbol of the new order of Co-Prosperity.
A mile from the station high dun-coloured walls looked down at us. We turned a c
orner and marched beside
them. Huge doors opened and we passed through them. The doors closed. We were pr
odded into a small
courtyard and that, too, was closed. Inside the courtyard we found seven hundred
men. It had been designed to
provide exercise for thirty female convicts. In it, and the cells for those thir
ty female convicts, we seven
hundred were now to live, sleep, cook, excrete, wash and die.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Which is how I came to be on the fourteenth of the twenty-two steps that led up
from the courtyard to the
women's cells in Pudu Gaol, with an Argyll at my feet who was dead. I looked at
him again, sad because of
his youth, frightened because of his death. Tears came to my eyes, almost equall
y for the Argyll and for
myself. And ahead lay four years of it. I struggled hard to convince myself that
it didn't matter.
A figure loomed up at the stairhead behind me. What's the matter with you?" it d
emanded in a broad Scots
accent that would have been more in place in Sauchiehall Street.
"Tired," I replied.
"And what's the matter with him?" demanded the Scot, pointing at the Argyll.
"Dead," I replied. The Scot moved quickly down past me and touched the Argyll's
face.
"Aye," he agreed softly, "he's dead." He thought for a moment and then asked: "C
an you help me carry him up
the stairs?" I suggested that first we clean the youngster up. So we carried him
down to the tong at the bottom
of the stairs, undressed him and washed him watched throughout in stolid silence
by the sentry, who sat with
his knees wide apart and his rifle across them. Then we carried the Argyll to th
e head of the stairs, where we
laid him down. I put his forage cap on his head and set it at the right angle. T
he Scot took off his own shorts
"I'll wear the wee lad's in the morning when they're dry," he Explained and we p
ut them on the Argyll. After
hesitating in awkward silence for a few moments, the Scot muttered: "Good night,
Aussie," and I muttered:
"Good night, Jock," and we went to our respective places on the floor and lay do
wn to think whilst all around,
close packed, helpless-looking as children, hundreds of men slept the restless s
leep of captivity.
1 OUR FIRST GAOL
Pudu Gaol was a place of fascinating stories. Every man in it had been captured
in extraordinary
circumstances miles behind the Japanese lines. Some had been betrayed by the nat
ive population in return for
a reward from the Japs: some, having succumbed to exhaustion, had woken to find
themselves surrounded by
curious Nipponese soldiers: some had given themselves up rather than allow the e
nemy to take reprisals
(because their presence in the area was known) upon the local population. A few,
like myself, had been dazed
by the swiftness of events and, unable to act decisively to avoid capture, had b
een forced to surrender.
Thus, once more I met Arthur Farmer, whom I had last seen protectively holding h
is mortally wounded friend
at the road block before Parit Sulong. And Jack Menzies, the man who stopped the
tanks at Parit Sulong by
firing our last gun singlehanded. He had hidden in the jungle's edge and lived f
or weeks on green pineapples
until his mouth was raw and bleeding. Then Malays brought the Japs to where he h
id.
There was Jack Mullins, the man whose throat had been blasted with a hand grenad
e: and with him Reg
Dudley and Dan Winters, the two who had refused to allow him to die. And Frank V
an Rennan and Bill
Harvey, whose exploits were sketchily described in The Jungle Is Neutral and who
were betrayedafter an
exhilarating career blowing up Japanese troop trains by natives. Also there were
numerous survivors of those
mass executions of the wounded which the Japanese had carried out during their a
dvance like the Indian
Army officer whom a Japanese officer had carefully shot through the heart, only
he got his sides mixed and
shot through the right breast instead of the left.
There was young Jimmy, then just eighteen years old, who had been collected with
one hundred and
thirty-four others of the wounded we abandoned at Parit Sulong and having been t
ied up and made to kneel in
the centre of the road machine-gunned. Jimmy's mate, also eighteen, and Jimmy hi
mself (though both shot
through the chest) still lived. Jimmy's mate writhed in pain and Jimmy lay acros
s him, whispering frantically:
"Keep still, keep still." But he could not keep still, so the Japanese noticed t
hat he still lived and, tossing
Jimmy off him and into the storm-water channel at the side of the road, lifted t
he slight figure to its feet and
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
riddled it with tommy-gun bullets. Clinging to the weeds at the edge of the stor
m-water channel, Jimmy spent
the next three hours in the black water. He saw the hundred and thirty-four mach
ine-gunned men bayoneted
and then set on fire with petrol and after their incineration systematically run
over, backwards and forwards,
by Japanesedriven trucks.
Then the enemy marched out of Parit Sulong, stamping their feet and singing thei
r Victory Song; but Jimmy
found that he was too weak from his wounds and shock to clamber out of the canal
. Too weak until wild pigs
came out of the jungle onto the carnage of the moonlit road, and along with a fe
w dogs, started eating the
burnt flesh. Then, in horror, he leapt out of the channel and ran, mile after mi
le, through the night, until he
collapsed in the jungle. For a week he wandered round, the bullet wound which ra
n clean through his chest
full of swamp mud. Then he was captured: and although his chest seemed to be hea
ling, in spite of the mud
and the complete absence of treatment in our gaol, his eyes were constantly full
of what he had seen. He and
dozens of others had the same story to tell.
There was even Dusty Rhodes. Dusty was about five feet two inches tall, dark of
complexion, strongly built in
a squat kind of way, and not fearfully intelligent He was in the middle thirties
and tended not to understand
things unless they were said slowly.
Dusty had escaped from Parit Sulong and had then swiftly be come lost. Eventuall
y, he saw a British tank, so
he knocked upon its side with his stick and, before it had occurred to him that
the occupants who emerged
from the tank looked strangely unlike Aus tralians, had been captured by the Jap
anese. Here, however, native
shrewdness intervened where intelligence could never shine. He, too, carried Mil
ls bombs down his shirt front
(a fact which the Japanese did not suspect in one who looked so harmless), so he
shoved his stubby-fingered
hand into his bosom, plucked out a grenade, de posited it carefully among his ca
ptors and then stepped
smartly behind a rubber tree. When, after a shattering explosion, he deemed it s
afe to emerge, he was most
gratified to observe that all the Jap anese gentlemen were dead. He accordingly
departed with great speed into
the jungle and there, once more, lost himself.
Unfortunately, Dusty learnt only slowly. Two days kter he came to another road a
nd on it he observed another
tank. "Surely, * thought Dusty, "these are British tanks ^with which he again ra
pped firmly on the side with
his stick. To his astonishment he was instantly over whelmed by what he declared
roundly to be "bloody
battalions" of Japanese who first relieved him of aU his remaining Mills bombs,
then treated, him very
roughly indeed and finally flung him into Pudu GaoL By that time, it is regretta
ble to relate, Dusty had be
come firmly and irrevocably convinced that in Malay all tanks were Japanese and
in this, of course, he was
quite right
Dusty's story for comic value was only equalled by that of the amateur astronome
r who, being lost, decided to
march by night, guiding himself by the stars. He therefore headed south, night a
fter night, religiously
following the pointer on Orion's belt. The only flaw in this impeccable plan was
that the pointer on Orion's
belt points north. He was most astonished when, after three weeks marching, he w
as roughly seized by hostile
natives and handed over to the Japanese. Instead of reaching Singapore, he had l
anded in Thailandl
Our quarters were on the first floor. On the ground floor beneath us were the pe
acetime administrative offices,
now occupied by the Japanese guards. There was also one small room in which dwel
t two British brigadiers
who seemed to hate all men of rank lower than brigadier and who asserted their n
ow non-existent authority by
urinating anywhere except in urinals (which is both anti-social and malodorous)
and by demanding larger
rations than anyone else because of their seniority. It became customary to rega
rd them as mad and to ignore
them.
A second ground-floor office was the gaol's hospital. It was, per haps, ten feet
by eight feet, with a tiny alcove
off it about six feet by six feet. Into this "hospital" we carried those of our
dysentery cases who were so ill as
to be helpless. They lay on the floor side by side in filth and squalor and unde
r a cloud of blue-nosed flies.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The stench and helplessness of it all was abominable and they died quickly, thos
e unfortunates who entered it.
The Japanese occasionally visited it, wearing heavy white gauze masks. Far from
granting us the drugs that
one would imagine such sights would invite, the little Nip only made gestures of
disgust and looked as if it
were all our fault.
The block in which all these cells, offices, makeshift hospitals and evil-telmpe
red senior officers were housed
constituted the base of a triangle. The other two legs of the triangle were whol
ly devoted to cells. They were
separated from the base by a triangle of grass round which ran a path and that t
riangle of grass was itself
neatly dissected by another path which ran from the centre of the administration
office (or base) to the apex
made by the junction of the two main cell blocks. Such was the architecture of o
ur new life.
The transition to gaol life even from the career of constant retreat and anxious
refuge which all of us had
followed for many weekswas violent As each man entered the gaol he was stripped
of every thing which
could possibly be used as a weapon. This included, as well as the obvious items,
all nail files, knives, razors
and blades. Beards consequently became unavoidable and for many days we itched m
addeningly. Not only
that, but we had no eating utensilsno plates, knives, forks or spoons. We ate ou
t of the lids of gaol bedpans,
old hub caps, battered kidney dishes. We ate with our fingers and bits of wood.
And what we ate was no less
violent a , transition than anything else rice, with no salt or flavouring or ve
getable matter of any land, and
cooked as only Army cooks who do not know the habits of rice can cook it We cons
umed a couple of pints of
this glue a day.
Finally, there was the inevitable emotional adjustment which had to be made in m
en who only yesterday had
been fighting the enemy and were now incarcerated in his hands and at his mercy
this the more so since he
had hastened to assure us that we were not deemed official prisoners of war but
only slave labour to be used at
will and disposed of just so soon as the demand for our talents had vanished. Th
is lent a certain doubtful
quality to the average man's expectation of life and resulted eventually in most
cases in a rather delightful air
of detachment. The philosophy of "It doesn't matter" had its birth in those days
.
So, during the day, we huddled, all seven hundred of us, in our small exercise y
ard designed for thirty. We
dug in shifts to try and keep latrines available and found it difficult even tho
ugh constipation of a truly
spectacular degree was almost universal. (Except for those who had dysentery, mo
st men found, to their
horror, that the diet change-over brought, on an average, nineteen days at least
during which the bowels
remained as unmoved and immovable as the Albert Memorial. By way, perhaps, of co
mpensation, however,
one's bkdder functioned with aU the irrepressible propensities of an Elysian spr
ing.) We huddled against the
wall, as far from the latrines as possible in that tiny space, and told our resp
ective tales.
Beards grew, stubble first, then scruffy fur. We had no soap, no towels, no clot
hes other than those we wore
usually only shorts. We huddled in the sun against the hot wall and threshed it
out Threshed out how we'd had
no air support but that, provided we d held the little bastards up for as long a
s possible, then we'd done all we
could ask, either of purselves or of officialdom. It was agreed that when one vo
lunteered for Empire service,
one volunteered for whatever came not for a war of complete safety fought under
an umbrella of Spitfires.
This conclusion having been reached after four days of fierce and continuous wra
ngling, we accepted our lot
philo sophically. The odds had been difficult. That was one of the things we had
volunteered for if it were
necessary. There was no more to be said. No more would have been said had it not
been for subse quent
orders sent to Singapore.
Singapore, however, had not yet fallen. We did not think it would fall. We thoug
ht that our forces would
withdraw to the island and there fight a war of bitter attrition until aerial su
pport and armour eventually
arrived. We did not know that a halfhearted civilian administration would compla
in of civilian casualties and
demand capitulation shades of 1940 LondonI We did not know that the big fifteen-
inch guns on Singapore
could not fire north, whence the attack came only along the southern 180 of the
compass, where there were no
enemy objectives at all. We did not know that the architects of Singapore, the i
mpregnable fortress, had
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
omitted to provide an adequate water supply on the island itself most of its wat
er coming from Johore across
die causeway. We knew none of these things. And remembering the stubborn retreat
of the British down to
Slim River, the victory at Gemas, the delaying action fought from Muar to Parit
Sulong, we had no fears for
Singapore's ultimate safety. We had no doubts nor ever at any time thenceforward
did havethat eventual
victory would be ours.
Meantime, we squatted in the courtyard; tanks rumbled endlessly down the road ou
tside; bombers barely lifted
off the nearby Kuala Lumpur airfield and over the gaol walls; the guards surveye
d us ceaselessly with sullen
venom; and every afternoon, towards eve ning, it rained. We ate our two pints of
glue, drank our one pint of
boiled water, grew steadily weaker and more hirsute, and then at dusk went to be
d.
Bed meant the floor of the verandah round the cell block and the few cells thems
elves. It meant every inch of
floor being covered in a sprawling mass of mixed Scotch, English and Australian
humanity. They lay on bare
boards with no covering. Wounded men: men with fever: men who dreamed and men wh
o couldn't sleep and
had no cigarettes. And all the time, over this carpet of sprawled bodies, a cons
tant pilgrimage picked its urgent
way towards the stairs paying homage to the irresistible power of the Great God
Bladder. As if nine or ten
such interruptions by Mother Nature a night were not enough, millions of lice jo
ined enthusiastic issue with us
over our respective rights as tenants in possession of Pudu Gaol and did their b
est to make sleep impossible.
Morning always came as a relief.
The first thing that happened each morning was the check parade teriko, the Japa
nese called it; but Japanese
was not a language for which we cared, so, as far as we were concerned, it remai
ned a check parade. There we
Australians fell in on one side of the court yard midst much chatter and horsepl
ay (after all, this was only a
performance for the "bloody Nips * ), On the other side, to the ac companiment o
f numerous unintelligible
bellows from regular Army warrant officers complete with waxed moustaches, the B
ritish troops formed an
immaculate squad which fairly quivered to attention. The two squads stood about
ten feet apart, the
Australians openly amused at the antics of the British; the British frankly asto
unded at our disorderliness; the
Japanese stamping up and down between us counting, in their customary infantile
and inaccurate manner, on
their fingers. After an hour or so ? it was usually over whereupon we of the dis
orderly element broke off by
mutual consent, whilst the Regulars opposite us carried on for minutes longer wi
th the ritual of the Dismiss.
There followed the morning meal a few dollops of greyish clag and after that the
parade to the so-called
"hospital" of those who were optimistic enough to think that by.parading they mi
ght get medical attention.
Admittedly, for this purpose, there was an M.O. But he had at his disposal no dr
ugs, no dressings, only a few
pairs of forceps and an old stethoscope. He had to cure gangrenous wounds, amoeb
ic and bacillary dysentery,
incipient avitaminosis, malaria, dengue and soon scabies. In those early days th
ere seemed to be nothing that
he could do but one still paraded, if only for the cold comfort of hearing him s
ay so.
As a result of my jungle march in bare feet and of the frequent rough treatment
those extremities had received
from any loving Japanese who had happened to notice that they were unprotected,
I was a regular attendant on
these parades. My feet had deep holes in them, mainly on the top where they had
been stamped on, and these
holes joined in evil-looking tunnels under the sinews and ten dons that led to t
he toes. The doctor declared
that these burrows must be kept clean. Since they were at the time full of black
mud and rotten flesh, this
proposition did not appeal to me in the least I lacked the moral courage, howeve
r, to say so and consequently
was attacked each morning by one of the handful of medical orderlies who had com
e to the gaol. Brandishing
one of the pairs of forceps and a swab of gaol canvas (canvas that had been used
by the peacetime convicts to
make mailbags), he would pursue me round and round the small concrete cell much
to the agitation of the
dysentery patients over whom we skipped, and to the fury of the blue-nosed flies
whose vile feeding we
interrupted until I was cornered. Then he would thrust his beastly instrument in
and out of the tortuous tunnels
in my feet. The holes gave no indication of healing; but, on the other hand, tih
ey became no deeper and with
this the doctor and the orderly seemed well pleased. Hugh enjoyed similar medica
l frolics with the sword
wound in his arm. Hundreds of other men went through agonies a thousand times wo
rse in silence as their
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
more serious wounds were dealt with.
One instance of the latter wifl do no harm. Jackie Marr had been a jockey. In th
e recent battles his brother had,
it was reported, been killed, and his own leg had been smashed by a mortar bomb
just below the knee. It was
now a very odd shape. There were no splints, so he lay on the verandah for weeks
having the mortar wound in
his leg picked clean of maggots and bone splinters each day and waiting for the
shattered bone to knit. This it
did after about a month, leaving his leg bent badly backwards and shortened. At
the earliest possible instant,
he started walking on it: then running: then bending it. The smallest movement s
till sent him grey with pain;
but every day he walked and ran round and round the courtyard and bent the leg l
ittle by little. On that same
leg in 1943 he marched two hundred miles into the heart of Thailand and in the w
hole time I knew him I never
heard him complain or ask for help. His only concession to the havoc of war was
to enquire frantically of
every newcomer to the gaol had they seen or heard anything of his brother.
Against this background, we came down to check parade one morning and there, on
the wall of the gaol, hung
a large banner on which was printed in large letters and shocking English a stat
ement to the effect that
Singapore had unconditionally surrendered to the Imperial Japanese Army. This we
did not for one second
believe. Even the British squad dissolved into laughter at such nonsense. But wh
en, two days later, all the
tanks we had heard rolling down past the gaol and all the planes that had lumber
ed overhead, and all the
soldiers who had sung their victory song as they marched through the city when a
ll these were heard heading
past us again, but this time north towards Burma, then we knew that it was true.

The appalling fact was accepted in the usual British fashionthere were a few mom
ents of sick silence, then
everyone began assessing where the British would counterattack and when the even
tual victory would be
won. It is encouraging to recollect that from that day forwards life was divided
into six-monthly periods in the
course of each of which all one's companions cheerfully disregarded the facts an
d looked forward confidently
to Allied landings, a Ger man collapse, the destruction of Tokyo and the end of
the war. Though the world
resounded to the thunder of the Japanese race through the Pacific islands, and R
ommel's march on Suez, and
the Nazi destruction of Russia, the British prisoners of the Japaneselike their
folk at home remained so
obdurately optimistic and so temperamentally resilient that they could blandly d
isregard all this gloom and at
any given moment announce: "Well, I reckon the war will have had it in six month
s 1" And at the conclusion
of that period they experienced no difficulty at all in forgetting that they had
ever said anything so silly and in
stating quite categorically that before the next six months were up, it would al
l be overl Intellectual irre
sponsibility of the first water, of course but heartening. They're nice people t
o be in gaol with, the British.
"SHANGRI-LA"
Almost concurrent with the fall of Singapore four other factors en tered our liv
es and these factors were to
colour our entire modus vivendi for the next four years. They were, to employ th
e vernacular of those days,
Bastardry about Drugs (which the Japs refused at all times to provide): the Impe
rial Decree that workingmeji
only got food: Happy Feet, and Rice Balls.
Rice Balls is not an elegant term. It was not, however, an elegant complaint, an
d no picture of the life we led
from 1942 to 1945 is complete without its inclusion. It was the most apparent sy
mbol of our greatest need
vitamios and, at the same time, of the common man's indomitable humour under eve
n the most humiliating of
afflictions. For Rice Balls, to us, meant not one of the favourite dishes of the
Japanese, but the ripping raw (by
the denial of even a tiny quantity of Vitamin B 2 ) of a man's scrotum and genit
als. One felt first a faint
discomfort, as of chafing. Then the skin split and peeled off an area which migh
t spread from the genitals
right down the inner thighs. This entire surface then became raw and sticky and
painfuL As one disconsolately
surveyed the damage one could not help being reminded of our redheaded sergeant
major and his tinea that
crept. By refusing us a spoonful each day of the worthless polishings taken off
rice (and they could easily
have given us a sackful), the Japanese wilfully condemned their prisoners to yea
rs of living with a scrotum
that was red weeping flesh. It was a constant factor in one's life that varied b
etween acute discomfort and
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
acute
121 pain. But it was always there and it thereby had its effect upon everything
one thought, everything one
ate, everything one stole and upon every risk one was prepared to run to allevia
te the avitaminosis of which it
was the most degrading symptom. It was the outward and visible sign of a physica
l need which was to kill
thousands and send hundreds of others blind, or near blind. And because the men
who suffered this affliction
ironically and aptly applied to it the name more commonly given to a food very c
lose to the heart of every son
of Nippon, it is fitting enough, however indelicate, to use it here. We ate rice
. We ate rice only. Consequently
we had Rice Balls.
Happy Feet were another symptom of the same thinglack of vitamins. This scourge
struck about half the men
in gaol only, but made up the balance by striking them with a pain twice as seve
re as anything any of us had
ever seen before. It inflicted them with a persistent series of searing stabs in
the soles of their feet. The pain
was like fire. But when they put their feet in water, the coolness immediately t
ore at them like ice, so that once
again they moaned for warmth. As you looked at them, the flesh dropped off their
bones: the light of youth
from their eyes: the life from their faces. Boys of twenty became suddenly, in p
hysique and expression, old
men shrunken and desperate. As one looked at them, and from them to the Japanese
who had so blandly
brought about this needless condition, one was filled with a pity for them and a
hatred for the enemy that
nothing can remove.
Japanese Bastardry, as we Australians called it, applied to almost everything in
our lives, but most of all
because of the far-reaching effects it had to our requests for drugs. Of these t
hey had captured vast quantities
and also had vast quantities of their own. Yet, despite the ready availability o
f emetin to cure dysentery, of
quinine (the Dutch East Indies are the source of all quinine and the Japanese no
w owned all the Dutch East
Indies) to quell our malaria, and of Vitamin B tablets (of which they had billio
ns, for they are easy of
manufacture), to counter he deficiencies of a rice diet, the little Nip constant
ly refused all requests for any of
them. His best answer was: "Ashita [Tomorrow]" which, in the Jap mouth, means "N
ever": his more common
reply was a savage bashing for him who was cou rageous enough to ask.
And, finally, with the introduction at this time of working parties, came that o
ther Japanese refinement food
only for those who work. Needless to say, this did not mean that those men who l
ay ill and dying in the gaols
and prison camps of Malaya starved, because whatever food the Japanese sent in a
s rations for the workers
was at once distributed to all. The point was that the ration was wholly inadequ
ate, even for the coolie
standards to which we had been reduced: but when that ration had to stretch over
an extra twenty per cent at
least of our working population, then gradual starvation became a very real pros
pect
The Japanese reasons for this policy were at times specious, at times brutal, bu
t never convincing. They varied
between the propo sition that noble Nippon had much reconstruction work to do in
wickedly exploited Malaya
wherefore we must be encouraged to work and the ruthless statement that warlike
Nippon did not greatly
admire men who surrendered and that they had more than enough of us anyway. Anyh
ow, until the end of the
war, rations were issued to us on the basis of workingmen only. Within a few wee
ks of the introduction of this
generous catering system our M.O. pronounced that at the present rate of supply,
with everything else in our
favour which he did not think a probable eventuality we could only survive for a
year. For some obscure
reason, the verdict that in twelve months we would all be dead seemed to provide
everyone with a perverse
sense of hilarity and we felt happier than we had for days.
Only one other factor remains to complete the scene in which we were for the nex
t nine months to live. That is
the imprisonment, as well as ourselves, in our gaol, of political prisoners main
ly Chinese seized by the
Japanese for alleged British sympathies or rebel activities.
The right-hand leg of the two which, with our quarters, formed a triangle of bui
ldings, was the one into which
the Japanese herded these unfortunate natives. There they questioned, tortured a
nd mur dered them. The
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
process was noisy since the last thing any Oriental ever does is to endure physi
cal pain or mental anguish in
silence of the impassive nature invariably ascribed to them by writers who have
never been to the East. When
an Indian, Chinaman, Jap, Korean or Indonesian is in pain he screams and moans w
ith an aban don which, to
the European, is downright embarrassing. They are all of them admirably impassiv
e about inflicting pain on
others being apparently immune to the European's ability to suffer vicari ouslyb
ut when stung themselves,
they become most vociferous.
Thus, in the course of their questioning, when they were whipped on the gaol whi
pping triangle, or filled with
water and jumped on, or made to stand for hours with a heavy stone held above th
eir heads, or suspended by
their ankles while urine was poured down their nostrils Japanese refinements whi
ch I had seen British soldiers
endure in stolid silence the air was rent with their shrill screams. And when at
last an entire cell of six natives
was informed that at dawn one of the six, any one, would be taken out and execut
ed, then the impassive
Orientals really went to town. All six of them would maintain an uninterrupted v
ocal lament throughout the
night. Then in the morning another head would appear on a pole in the streets an
d the surviving five would
relapse into ecstatic silence, for they were still alive; whilst the native popu
lation outside would remain totally
unmoved, for the head was not theirs; and we, who had so despised their screamin
g, would notice the head
with shocked pity because a young man who had lived was now dead. All a matter o
f outlook but, of the two,
I preferred ours.
In spite of the horror of these heads as we marched out of the gaol each day, an
d in spite of the humiliation of
natives watching us work for the Japanese, the working parties were in those fir
st weeks of captivity a
glorious release. It was delightful, even though the work was heavy and the Jap
engineers in charge of us
vicious to the point of insanity, to get out of those high walls with their laye
rs of loose bricks on top so that
escape over them was impossible. It was bliss to walk ten yards without, in that
interval, having to cross
twenty legs and smell the all-pervading smell of latrines. It was restoring to s
natch a piece of frangipani off a
tree as one passed to smell its dean scent and carry it till the white petals we
nt brown.
We worked for several weeks before this novelty wore offworked, repairing Kuala
Lumpur's demolished
bridges, with that hysterical speed and to the accompaniment of those incessant
hys terical screams and
bellows that seem to be the main equipment of the Japanese engineer. Then one da
y we returned to the gaol
and were told some good news we were to move, all of us, out of the women's quar
ters designed for thirty,
into the left wing of the two legs of the triangle. There we would live in supre
me comfort, with only three men
in each cell meant for one.
On the move being made, it was discovered that the V of the two cell blocks whic
h, with our old quarters,
made a triangle, was, in fact, an inverted Y and into the stem of the Y moved al
l the British troops. Thus in the
Y we had Asiatic political prisoners screaming their heads off on one side, Aust
ralians on the other, the
British in the stem.
I moved, with Hugh Moore and Arthur Farmer, into the cell nearest the junction o
f all three blocks and started
at once drawing a full-scale map of the world over the whole of the left-hand wa
U so that we might the better
follow the destruction of Nazidom in Europe and of Nippon in Southeast Asia and
the Pacific. Our life had
begun to assume the shape and pattern which was to dominate the next four years
turning gaols and jungle
into our home: living close to death by disease: working for the Japanese, and s
tealing from them.
After we had done an initial reconnaissance and killed all the bugs we could see
in our cell, I walked out into
the wide passage on either side of which the cells ran. Next door Roy and Rene h
ad chalked up over their door
"Shangri-la": across the way, three in fantrymen had printed cheerfully: "Abando
n hope all ye who enter
here": through the grill which separated our cell block from the British, I coul
d see five Englishmen who sat
on the floor and, in close harmony, assured the world that "There's No o Place L
ike Home"; whilst across to
the right six Chinese wailed incessantly because tomorrow one of them must die.
Harry came up, smiling his
crooked smile, and slapped me on the back: "Never mind, Russ," he said, "it's a
great lif e if you don't
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
weaken." A meaningless cliche it could well have been our motto.
3 "PUDU'S GROWING PAINS"
The most outstanding personality in Pudu Gaol more outstanding than any of the s
oldiers with their
hair-raising tales of the last few months: more outstanding than any of our own
leaders or than any of our
Japanese guards: more outstanding even than the two eviltempered brigadierswas a
rosy-cheeked little man
who a few years before had been small enough to cox the Cambridge VIII all over
Europe, and who at the
battle of Batu Pahat had been big enough, though a non-combatant and ordered not
to, to stay behind with the
wounded who could not be evacuated, He stayed there and, when the Japanese swept
down the road and
would have slaugh tered the wounded, this little man flayed them with such a vir
ulent tongue that they were
sufficiently disconcerted to refrain. They beat him up very cruelly for days, be
cause they did not care for
being verbally flayed, even in a language they did not understand, but they did
not kill the wounded men he
had stayed behind to protect In the end, they allowed the little man, and the ha
ndful of R.A.M.C. orderlies
who with equal heroism had faced certain capture, pos sibly murder, to look afte
r their charges, to collect
what food they could and provide for the helpless men. This little man with the
rosy cheeks and the cheerful
grin and his mop of hair like a small boy's eventually brought all his orderlies
and his wounded to the
comparative security of the gaol. His name is Padre Noel Duck worth. It is a nam
e which tens of thousands of
Australians, English men and Scots will always remember till the day they die.
He was without any doubt at all the mainspring of the orderly way of life we man
aged to carve for ourselves
out of the rather improbable material of Pudu. He was fearlessly outspoken, and
yet could be very kind. He
was the easiest man to talk to most of us had ever met. He organized lectures an
d delivered his own inimi
table version of the European tour of the Cambridge VIII to initiate the series.
He created out of a cell a chapel
to which even such heathen as I were glad to go and sit and think about Home, or
God, or whatever it is
people do sit and contemplate when they re lonely. He founded the gaol's black m
arket with the Japanese
selling them anything from gold fillings to fountain pens. He discovered a non-e
xistent "well-dressed
Eurasian" whilst on his numerous visits to the cemetery to bury our dead and, fr
om him, obtained a daily news
bulletin which made our hearts glow.
Duckworth's news was no mealymouthed, fainthearted news. Having determined to gi
ve us good cheer by
lying, the noble padre lied most blackly. Russian tanks swarmed through Poland t
owards Germany: Britain
planned a huge invasion of Italy: millions of Japanese were being annihilated in
Burma all this in early 1942,
at the time when the advance on Stalingrad was about to start, India seemed abou
t to fall and Italy was still
only being vaguely referred to as the "soft underbelly" of Europel
But to men who were ill and starving and dying off at a quite alarming rate, the
padre's "well-dressed
Eurasian" was exactly what was required. By the time his resounding triumphs had
begun to attract
scepticism, we had all become sufficiently toughened to the sordidness of our su
rroundings to be of good
heart without the artificial boost of "Duckworth's news," as it was called. We e
ven acquired a wireless set and
with that received regular B.B.C. bulle tins which, though they contained no res
ounding triumphs at least, not
on our side nevertheless gave us what we needed, which was contact with the outs
ide world.
The padre's black market though it might not in theory have secured the blessing
of the various archbishops of
the Anglican Church was, nevertheless, conducted with considerable 6lan. The pad
re was a realist as well as a
Christian not for nothing had he worked in the slums of English cities. We neede
d food: the Malays would
sell us food: the Japs coveted any Western trinkets such as watches and fountain
pens. Though there were few
of these that they had not already looted from the men in Pudu Gaol, the padre f
ully intended to sell them
those few, so that the proceeds could be used to buy from the Malays.
"Nippon," he would shout peremptorily at the weakest-willedlooking guard availab
le. The gentleman
addressed would leap un easily. "Come here, you little sewer rat," the padre wou
ld continue in honeyed tones,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Come here, you charming little lump of garbage, and buy this perfectly worthles
s pen."
"Ah so-ka!" the Jap would murmur delightedly as his eye caught sight of the pen
in the padre's hand.
"Pen-ka?" he would ask.
"Yes," the red-cheeked, boyish little man would agree, "it's a pen. Only a half-
wit like you would ask anything
so silly."
"Parker-ka?" the Jap would ask. The padre would look instantly at the inscriptio
n on the side of the pen and,
though the inscription very rarely said Parker, he invariably replied, "Yes, Par
ker. Parker Number One, eh?
you walking example of the horrors of V.D. They
1*7 should hang you up in all public lavatories instead of those rather dull lit
tle notices. Now tell me, Tojo,
how much of your ill-gotten pay are you going to give me for this very inferior
pen?"
And in the end he would bleed the Nip white, give him the pen and send him packi
ng with a fresh blast of
insults which were de livered with so sweet a smile that the guard would bow low
and gratefully, convinced
that he had both made a good deal and been flattered. Thus did all the pens, wat
ches, grubbed-out gold fillings
from teeth, signet rings, cigarette cases and other valuables or al leged valuab
les go the way of Nippon: and
the money we gained in return for these possessions went the way of the Malays:
and the food we gained in
return for the money well, as the proverb says, all roads lead to Rome!
The padre did not, however, limit his anti-Japanese operation to pleasantly deli
vered vituperation in the course
of his business trans actions. On Sundays he blasted them in his sermons lumping
them together as *The
incarnation of evil" and pointing an accusing and fearless finger at them as the
y stood nearby, self-consciously
guarding us. And at nights, during the week, he frequently played the gaol game
of wrecking Nippon's rifles.
This consisted of getting any Nip guard into conversation by showing him photogr
aphs or teaching him games
till he leant his rifle against the wall and devoted the whole of his miserable
mind to trying to master the white
man's skill. Then, while he was ab sorbed, the bolt would be taken from his rifl
e and removed to a nearby cell
where it was ensured, by bending the firing pin, that that particular rifle woul
d never be much use again. By
the middle of the year it was estimated that, with the padre's enthusiastic sup
port, there wasn't a rifle in the
guardhouse that would fire. There were, however, unfortunately, plenty of machin
e guns and grenades; and
there were still those layers of loose bricks on top of the prison wall. Neverth
eless, one felt, it was a start.
The middle of the year, however, had not yet come. It was still early in the pie
ce and it was a March day when
the Japanese sud denly presented us with a form which we were to sign. It de cla
red that we promised not to
escape. Since this was contrary to both military law and our own inclinations we
at once refused. All our
officers were locked up a procedure which they endured with remarkable equanimit
y since there were
seventeen or eighteen of them to a cell but we still refused. The Japanese utter
ed nasty threats. We refused.
Then they rang Singapore and Singapore, who had been having similar trouble with
seventeen thousand
prisoners at Changi, changed the request to an order and accompanied the order w
ith the permission of the
senior British officer in Singapore to sign. The signatures having been obtained
under duress, it was
unanimously accepted that the forms meant nothing anyway and we signed.
Our officers were released grubby after three days* and nights* close confinemen
t without benefit of water or
latrines, and hoarse .from seventy-two hours* practically non-stop defiant singi
ng. They were a good lot,
those men, and we felt a closeness to and affection for them, which no amount of
subsequent regimentation in
other camps could destroy. They ate our food: lived our lives: worked with us an
d in our few leisure moments
talked and played with us. They were, or became, men anyone would have been happ
y to follow which was
not always, in those difficult days, to be the case.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
My map was now complete and I was very proud of it. I had drawn it in the most m
inute detail that school
atlases and the pooled knowledge of all the gaol's intelligentsia made possible.
I had col oured all Axis-held
territory black, all Allied-held territory red. This started a running battle wi
th the Japanese.
A little gentleman, who wore a white short-sleeved shirt, Bombay bloomers which
reached well below his
knees, brown socks of the type usually referred to as "hosiery, natty gent s," s
uspenders and two-tone shoes,
arrived in the gaol one day and announced to a truly astonished Australian audie
nce that he was a colonel.
"Looks more like the Queen of the May to me," commented Harry which comment the
colonel ignored. He
began his tour of inspection, his long Samurai sword clanking along on the concr
ete floors behind him, his
short legs the subject of open admiration.
Lest anyone should miss this exhilarating spectacle, men were summoned by their
friends from all sides.
"Hey, Regl Reg! Get on to him, will yer?"
"Rocky, c'mere, take a gander at Nippon."
"How's his rotten form," And, from just behind him, a lecherously inflected, "Oo
h, you gorgeous creature."
Nippon looked most gratified then he spotted my map and moved over to it.
With even more gratification, he moved his finger through black Japan, down blac
k China, into black
Indo-China, thence through Thailand, Burma, Malaya, the East Indies, Borneo and
Timor, all of which were
dark as night. There, however, the gratification ceased. New Guinea, India and A
ustralia were all bright red.
"You have done this?" he asked me. I nodded.
"These-u," he asserted, pointing to the red countries concerned, "these-u all Ni
ppon, Tomorrow changey
changey." with which he swept off, a truly impressive example of Japanese sartor
ial splendour.
Next day, accordingly, a guard arrived and painted New Guinea, India and Austral
ia (and, for good luck, New
Zealand) black. That night I painted them red again. A few days later this hideo
us crime was discovered and,
after emphasizing their point with prolonged smacks and thumpings, the red spots
were again blackened,
South Africa being added to the list as a reprisal. I retaliated by reddening th
em all again and by removing
Burma from the list of countries I had originally been willing temporarily to gr
ant the Axis.
That, when it was discovered, produced a real crisis. Most of the guard trooped
down to my cell and there
examined the offending map. With much jabbering among themselves and an occasion
al bellow of "Currah"
at any sympathizer who tried to look in and encourage me, they discussed my crim
e. Brown fingers were
pointed one after another at the countries and islands in question. Brown eyes f
lashed darkly when Burma was
seen to be incarnadined. There seemed little doubt that the Imperial Japanese Ar
my was highly displeased and
that very soon an execution would follow. I could see from the expressions on my
comrades' faces that they
were under no illusions as to who would be the subject of this execution. I was
extremely frightened and
wondered why on earth when, at school, my highest mark for geography had been tw
enty-eight per cent, I
should at this lamentable stage suddenly have gone mad on maps. Then the decisio
n as to my fate was made.
With a falsetto giggle, the senior Japanese N.C.O. decided that it was all too m
uch for him, muttered, "Damm,
dammg" at me reprovingly, and, tapping me lightly on top of the head with his ba
yonet, gave me a cigarette.
"Tojo presento," he said as he handed it to me. "Aringato" I thanked him. The wh
ole guard trooped out of the
cell: the incident was closed: the map remained red. Not being a smoker, I gave
the cigarette to Hugh, who lay
on his back on the cell slab. He inhaled deeply and then blew out a sharp cloud
of smoke.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Not bad," he said, looking at the cigarette appreciatively, Virginia."
"Tojo presento," I told him.
"Balls," he replied.
In any community where near starvation prevails, the first thing to get settled
to the satisfaction of all is the
distribution and cooking of what rations there are. To this problem the thousand
-odd men of Pudu devoted
themselves with earnest application in the timehonoured way of all Britons they
formed a committee.
As a result, the existing cooks, who for weeks had produced only glue, were summ
arily sacked and men of
initiative put in their place. The gaol cookhouse had already been wangled for u
s by pro tracted negotiations
with the Nips. The cooked rice was now col lected in tubs from that cookhouse an
d carried in sight of all to
the distribution points where so many men fell in per tub of rice. The contents
of each tub were then issued, a
scoop at a time, to the men in the queues, the whole operation being supervised
by ap offi cer. The officers
themselves collected their food last and only ate when they were sure that every
one of the men had received
his ration a point of military etiquette which I saw in no other camp and which
speaks volumes for the calibre
of the officers we had with us at Kuala Lumpur.
There remained, however, one extremely difficult problem what to do with the few
crumbs of rice which,
inevitably, were left over after each man had received his ration. (The few crum
bs were always left because
the men who dished the rice out received their ration last and when you are star
ving you never leave yourself
in the position where your own food has gone to someone else.)
Early on these crumbs, perhaps three or four pints of rice in all, were left in
the tub and anyone could take
them who got there first. It was found, however, that good manners survived, eve
n in gaol; and that every day,
every meal, the same two or three pigs swiped the lot, whilst the same hundred s
at, exerting every ounce of
selfcontrol, and in anguished silence watched them. Then one day the three pigs
fought. And one of them, in
his desperation, hurled him self head foremost into the tub, where he snuffled t
he rice up, his legs twitching
with greed in the air above. Thus to acknowledge, so unashamedly, that we had be
en reduced to the status of
animals was too much. There was a roar from all sides and a decision was made, t
here and then, whereby to
deal with all future surpluses.
We would all, it was decided, have numbers. We would take it in turn to receive
an extra ration. The extra
ration was known as a feggi ("leggi" being Malay for "more"): the number you had
was your *leggi number,'
Thus does any society develop the rules by which its communal life is made both
possible and tolerable.
"Leggis" were an institution that remained with us through all the days that wer
e to follow until the war ended
in 1945. They are a striking example of civilized man's ability to resist even t
he animal gnawings of starvation
in the interests of the communal effort It cannot be too strongly stressed how,
in those days, the individual had
to subordi nate his desires to society rules if that society were to survive. Th
e three things that could, at any
time, kill us all off were work, disease and starvation.
To overcome the murderous effects of the almost impossible tasks set us by the J
apanese, teamwork was
required to the nth degree. Only split-second timing and simultaneous effort by
a squad of sick men could
enable them to lift huge dredge cups onto railway trucks and, having lifted them
, to deposit them so gently
that fingers and limbs were not severed. Only rigid self-discipline could keep l
atrines unfouled so that the
maggots did not breed round them and the disease-carrying fly increase its numbe
rs. Only a faithful adherence
to the rules could ensure that the tiny quantity of food which came into the cam
ps would keep everyone alive:
and that the limited water available would slake one's thirst, keep one clean an
d wash one's eating-irons. All
those things were managed. The prisoner-ofwar life of those f our years was an o
bject lesson in living
together.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
One of the many advantages of our new accommodation was that there was not only
more room in which to
sleep at night, but also extra space during the day. The triangle of lawn enclos
ed by the cell blocks and
administrative building became common ground for all troops. On the left of the
Australian wing as one faced
it from those administrative buildings was another area of lawn which stretched
thirty yards or so to the gaol
wall and contained what had been a prison workroom in its centre. In the area bo
unded by the stem of the
inverted Y, the Asiatic wing and the back wall of the gaol was another exercise
yard which contained a rather
ornate fountain and a small cloister.
The lawn to the left of our quarters was given to us Australians: the exercise y
ard between the British quarters
and the Asiatic cells was given to the British: the workroom in our area became
the gaol hospital: the cloister
in the Pommies exercise yard became the gaol church: the fountain our communal b
ath it was white and
ornate and strangely out of place in the grimness of Pudu. Around it thence fort
h hundreds of naked men were
to be observed splashing water over themselves in the nightly bath hundreds of d
eeply tanned bodies among
whom the Pommies were quickly distinguishable because of their passion for tatto
os. Arms blazed with pink
and blue females of most lecherous allure. The complete crucifixion scene across
a broad Highland back was
just as common as hair on an Australian chest.
The existence of bare concrete walls and floors (already becoming infested with
bugs), of a makeshift
hospital, an impromptu church, a communal bath and that common triangle of lawn
this skeleton life we
clothed with a sack upon which to lie at night, a work roster to keep the gaol f
ree of all dirt, flies and blocked
drains, and what ever miracles of improvisation the Anglo-Saxon mind could evolv
e. Our new civilization had
begun.
Hugh developed happy feet: Arthur developed chronic wind: my ankles swelled omin
ously and we all passed
beyond the itchy stage of beard-growing. The gaol population was now becoming mo
st interesting to look at
with its assorted beards which ranged from magnificent black growths with sworls
and curls, like the one Dan
Winters sported, right down to the three mandarin-like hairs that sprouted despe
rately from Hugh's stubborn
but youthful chin. I myself looked like a rather melancholy airedale.
These beards were nevertheless intensely uncomfortable. With our long hair, they
overheated our skins, and
were also difficult either to keep clean without soap or to dry without towels.
Moreover, one lived in terror of
their being infested by the ubiquitous louse. One did, however, derive much comf
ort from suspending one self
from the end of one's own beard whilst one talked at night.
Night talks turned out to be one of the never-failing charms of a life that was
remarkable for its lack of
charming aspects. Among our numbers, as happened in every camp for all the ensui
ng years, were men who
had done everything. There was no part of the world, no job in the world, no pro
fession, no hobby that
someone in Pudu had not himself done or seen. Whilst one retained any zest for l
ife at all, there was always
good conversation to be had in prison camps. If one wanted information on any of
the professions, the trades
or the arts; on exploration, big-game hunting, skiing or any other sport; on pro
fessional soldiering or
professional crime; on great men or the common man, one had only to search withi
n the few hundred cells of
Pudu to find someone who was an authority. To a youth like myself just twenty-on
e and, except for the last
few months, nur tured solely in the groove of a public school, a university and
as many games as daylight
would allow the experience was invalua ble. I could have wished, though, that it
had been acquired in a
slightly less rugged environment.
In consequence of all this, however, it came as no surprise to anyone that when
the Japanese discovered that
all the frozen meat in the Kuala Lumpur Cold Storage Company was bad and there f
ore graciously presented
it to us, we had in our midst both butchers and health inspectors. The former cu
t up the few carcasses of
Australian beef allotted to us each day and the latter expertly sought out gland
s and cavities in the flesh and
declared whether or not though rottenit was beyond consumption. Usually it was,
where upon the carcasses
were burnt, watched with fierce longing by hundreds of pairs of meat-hungry eyes
. But occasionally it was not
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
and then the cookhouse would prepare a stew of surpassingly vile savour and we w
ould be issued with two
cubes each of greenish meat, a shred of nauseating fat and a scoopful of juice w
hich looked like sewage.
The taste of this stew was quite remarkably foul. In spite both of that, however
, and of a boyhood aversion to
all fat and any food that smelt even faintly "off," I consumed it unhesitatingly
. But upon the occasion of the
arrival of the first of these stews, Hugh and Arthur, I noticed, both left their
s.
"Belt it into you," I advised them. Arthur did so and at once vomited, bringing
up not only the stew but the
morning's rice and a tapeworm, about eighteen inches long as well, which was int
eresting. Hugh looked
stubborn and left his stew untouched.
"Belt it into you, Hugh," I repeated, "good for your happy feet,"
"Rather have the happy feet," Hugh asserted grimly, to which, unsympathetically,
I replied: "Come off it."
"Whose feet and whose food is it?" demanded Hugh. I agreed that all three were h
is.
"Well then." he queried.
"Well then," I concluded, "belt it into you."
There were a few seconds smouldering silence, then Hugh spoke again: "You know b
loody well that I hate
fat," he said.
"Look, Hugh," I told him, "I don't care whether you hate fat and meat and rice..
."
"I do," he assured me.
"I reckon," I went on aggressively, "you should still eat the lot."
"What you reckon," pointed out my fair-haired friend, rather despondently, "is t
hat no one is entitled to
disagree with what you reckon." I was astonished at the possible justice of this
remark, but he was continuing
his home truths so I said nothing.
"You've changed, Russ," he said, "you used to be the easiest bloke to get on wit
h I ever knew. Now you're just
an argumentative bastard." So that was that. Hugh got up and, slinging his dish
of stew irritably across the
concrete path at me, hobbled off to cool his aching feet in the water of the fou
ntain. I sat for some time there
after chewing over the undoubted change in the Braddon outlook of late and inter
rupting myself every now
and then with a burp that was redolent with very dead, very bad meat.
A lad called Pete--until recently a fat boy--sidled up and asked me what the leg
gi number was up to. It was his
only interest in life. He never discussed or asked about anything else. I said I
didn't know (which wasn't true)
and he ambled disconsolately off to ask someone else. I carried on thinking abou
t me.
An hour later things were fairly clear in my mind. I had changed, I knew. I reme
mbered that before becoming
involved in a war I had been pleasant-mannered and agreeable enough. If I felt u
pon any occasion either
unpleasant or disagreeable the veneer of polite ness impressed upon me by a stri
ct father and a mother who
(though capable of both extreme frivolity and delightful vulgarity) stood no non
sense, had always managed to
conceal the fact quite adequately. The nearest I ever came in those days to open
disagreement in discussion
was to say: "Oh, I see. I must have got it wrong."
And, for those halcyon days of family life, tennis tournaments, football matches
, week ends of surfing and
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
sporadic attendance at lectures which were on the whole neither inspiring nor we
ll de livered, that had been
enough. Since then, however, I had rather abruptly been required to kill other m
en and to avoid being killed
myself: to decide whether or not, regardless of their rank, men's orders were wo
rth obeying: to see a fellow
Australian murdered on my own verdict: and to adjust the limited Braddon materia
l available so that it would
best and longest stand up to the strain of life as a guest of the Japanese*
I acknowledged at once, not for the first time, that the old Brad don was the ni
cer one. I even admitted that the
present Braddon was probably not nice at all. I nevertheless faced up finally to
the fact that what I had become
was, if I were to survive, what I would stay. In the absence of all clothes exce
pt a beard and a G string, it
seemed definitely the case now that "circumstances maketh the man." If they hadn
't done a good job, it was
sad but too late. Thus resigned to myself, I got up and made my way to my cell w
here Arthur told me that the
M.O. reckoned we all had worms like the one he'd just sicked up, whilst I went s
ystematically round the walls
killing bugs. One stopped on my map, right in the middle of Berlin. Viciously I
jabbed him with my thumb.
Smelling the musty stink of crushed vermin, Arthur looked up from his biological
dissertation and grinned at
my still twisting thumb. "Got the little bastard," he pronounced. I grinned back
. TTou know," he continued,
"the M.O. says that's the longest worm he ever saw. Says you pick up the eggs fr
om eating rice." "Go on," I
answered him. Then his wind got the better of him: so I left and went looking fo
r Hugh to see if I could help
by rubbing his feet
Each day a party of most of the men in the gaol who could walk went out to work
mainly ant labour on bridge
reconstruction, car rying sandbags in an endless chain of half-naked, barefooted
misery under the mocking
eye of local natives (especially the Indians).
Bridge work, however, was infinitely preferable to the collection and loading on
to lorries and trains of the
wrecked dredges that lay all round Kuala Lumpur. These had been blown up and des
troyed as part of the
scorched-earth policy of our own administration and now lay in huge unwieldy lum
ps of reluctant metal in
every tin mine. The Nip engineers were collecting every bit of it and ship ping
it off to Japan, there to be
converted into armour. By generous applications of pick handle to any exposed po
rtion of the body, and by
piratical slashings with their bayonets (usually the flat of the bayonet, but ev
ery now and then just to make it
interesting with the edge, which they always kept sharp), our captors urged us o
n to lift almost superhuman
weights. The days were a bedlam of their incessant, maniacal screaming maintaini
ng a steady crescendo until
the glaring tropical sun began to set. "Speedo," they screamed which explains it
self.
"Bugero!" they screamed which means "Fool!"
"Yazumd nei" they screamed which means, in answer to the request "Yazumt-ka?" "N
o. No rest."
"Dammd, damm" they screamed, which means "Wrong, lousy, bloody awful." For a lan
guage which contains
no swear words, Japanese can sound more hideous than any other I know. The pink
dusk would see us
marching, bedraggled and blood-smeared, back to the gaol: the evening was spent
licking our wounds,
dreaming of home and food, and wondering whether tomorrow could possibly be quit
e as bad.
But whatever the job and wherever it was, we still, at all times, had one means
of asserting ourselves we stolel
We stole with all the cunning of professional burglars and with all the incorrig
ible enthusiasm of the
kleptomaniac. Although it was universally accepted that in this pastime the Aust
ralians were without peers
(probably, the Pommies maintained, because of our dubious back ground of convict
settlements and
bushrangers), the British troops were nevertheless just as diligent and frequent
ly achieved spectacular
successes. Thus, though it was the Australians who stole the most food, it was t
he Pommies who first stole
drugs: though it was the Australians who smuggled into Pudu a wireless set, it w
as the Pommies who brought
home some emetin: though it was the Australians who brought in the first weapons
broken bayonets it was the
Pommies who, with typical British abandon, went the whole hog and blithely lined
up for the usual search at
the gaol gates with hand grenades resting comfortably in the curly hair under th
eir various hats.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
One of the earliest successes in this direction was the party who, working near
a hospital, managed to "send
off" (as the language of those days was for the verb "to steal") a large number
of lumps of sulphur and several
packages of something labeled Mg SO 4. Anything labelled Mg SO 4 must--the gentl
eman who sent it off
thought-- be extremely precious. He accordingly deposited one large package down
his G string, gave another
to his comrade, who did the same, and they then waddled off with every outward a
nd visible sign of being
afflicted either by acute elephantiasis or chafe. They were both of them extreme
ly displeased, upon
successfully passing all searchers and re-entering the gaol, to be told by the M
.O., to whom they presented
their treasure, that it was no more nor less than Epsom salts. The M.O., however
, was delighted both with the
Mag. Sulph. as he insisted upon calling the salts and with the lumps of sulphur.
He asked only that we acquire
for him a grease which he could use as a base for the sulphur, whereby an ointme
nt might be produced. Next
day accordingly three ten-pound tins of British Army mosquito repellent which ha
d been singularly useless as
a repellent of mosquitoes and was now to be given another chance as a base for o
intments were sent off and
brought home to the noble doctor. Thus equipped, the doctor, his hospital in our
court yard now littered with
dysentery patients and his medical parades attended daily by a long queue of tho
se who suffered from rice
balls, set to work.
All internal complaints were treated with Epsom salts: all external complaints w
ork-party injuries, battle
wounds or skin diseases that ranged from tinea to scabies were smeared with sulp
hur set in a base of mosquito
cream. This latter, when applied to a raw scrotum, produced the most lively resu
lts and proved highly
diverting for those who still awaited their treatment. The sulphur-and-mosquito-
cream mixture was known,
unlovingly, to the inhabitants of Pudu as Hell-Fire Ointment and produced no cur
es whatsoever. Perhaps,
however, the psychological effect of queuing up to see a doctor, even though it
meant the partial and public
incineration of what one had once regarded as the most private and inviolate por
tions of one's anatomy, was
good. In retrospect, I'm not sure there must, however, have been some reason, I
feel, why I queued so
persistently.
The problem of dysentery the M.O., a young New Zealander, attacked with decision
and courage. The death
rate was now so high this his violent methods seemed justifiable. He put all dys
entery sufferers onto a liquid
diet rice gruel and the juice of a few boiled sweet potato leaves which grew out
side the gaol and flushed them
out violently with repeated doses of salts. It must have taken great strength of
mind to deny starving men any
solid food and then to shatter their weakened frames with the explosive qualitie
s of concentrated Mg SO*. He
did it, however, and quite a few of those who had seemed to be dying survived.
Quite a few, however, did not The hospital in those early days was a shambles in
spite of the tireless efforts of
the few orderlies. Every inch of floor space was occupied by the sick some lying
on the bare concrete: some
on sacks: some on stretchers. Everywhere orderlies ran with improvised bedpans,
or with pails of water, to
clean up men who in their helplessness had fouled themselves. In between the pat
ients squatted their friends,
murmuring words of encouragement and brushing off the flies. And every now and t
hen a low moan would
presage that pool of black blood which meant that a man's bowels had burst and h
is life gone.
It was weeks before the liquid-diet-cum-salts campaign slowed this flood of deat
h down to the steady trickle
that endured right through the last six months in Pudu Gaol. Distressingly the t
oll of death in those days fell
almost entirely on the British troops. This, perhaps, was not surprising. Hundre
ds of Argylls and Leicesters
had been almost dead from starvation and fever when, after weeks of refuge (from
the time of the battle at
Slim River), they had eventually been captured. Nor is anyone from the United Ki
ngdom as hardened to heat
as the Australian. Fjnally, we Australians had all had the benefit of a lifetime
of rich food and sunshine and
exercise, which the average Pommy most decidedly had not.
So the unequal slaughter continued and we Australians looked on appalled as, day
after day, little Padre
Duckworth held funeral services for two or three. As the body was borne out thro
ugh the communal triangle,
loosely crated in a crude coflBn, everyone who was not out at work stood silentl
y to attention. The fear that
had first gripped me when I saw the young Argyll dead at my feet on the staircas
e used to hit hard at those
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
moments. And on every frowning forehead of every silent man one could, as the bo
dies were home out to be
buried, read the same thought who next and how to stop it?
Then one day the impossible happened an Australian died! Died of dysentery like
anyone else. It was most
unnerving to our recently acquired sense of national immunity. To overcome our s
piritual malaise at this
outrageous blow, and to reassert our national pride, we resolved to face it out
with as elaborate a funeral as we
could contrive.
By borrowing almost every stitch of clothing in the entire gaol and by conductin
g the ceremony in the early
morning before the working parties were due to leave, we managed to line both si
des of the path which passed
up the centre of the communal triangle of lawn with men who wore shirts, shorts,
socks and boots. All
hundred and thirty-odd Australians stood there at attention: behind them the Eng
lish and Scottish troops
whose clothes we wore. Four friends bore the coffin up the path. The moment shou
ld have had dignity.
Unfortunately, however, it was impossible not to observe that the coffin was onl
y a crude plank crate with
three-inch gaps all round; that the shrunken little body inside rocked grotesque
ly from side to side in this
ill-fitting couch: and that the stench of decomposition so swift in that climate
was most pronounced. All
dignity was entirely gone this was just a corpse that stank. As I resolved that
never in my life would I go to
another funeral, the Japanese guard at the main gate stood up off his chair, sal
uted and bowed to the passing
cortege.
"It's the only time those little apes care a hoot for us," Hugh muttered. I repl
ied that, as far as I was concerned,
it was much too late. We went inside; took off our borrowed clothes and redonned
our G strings; returned the
shirts and shorts to the Pommies from whom we had borrowed them and then fell in
, ready to be marched out
by Nippon for a day's work.
4 HOW TO BE A P.O.W.
It would be as well, perhaps, at this stage, if I made clear my views on "How to
Live as a Prisoner of War."
With world events now so faithfully following the time-honoured build-up to a wa
r, these views may be of
value and it will do me personally no harm at all to repeat them as the only thi
ng for which, in time of war, I
am now fully trained is capitulation.
The first essential for any would-be P.O.W. is, of course, to find a suitable fo
e to whom to surrender. Such a
foe should most definitely be a signatory of the Hague Convention and if possibl
e a fully affiliated member of
the International Red Cross as well. He should not be Japanese. On second though
ts, he shouldn't even be an
Asiatic which includes, of course, the Russians and, therefore, limits the field
of potential captors most sadly.
Next, having selected one's future host and surrendered to him-- a procedure whi
ch should be carried out well
away from the heat of battle where even the purest of intentions tend to be misu
nderstood--we come to
equipment which the prisoner-of-war-to-be should bear with him into captivity.
First and foremost he should carry no military documents which are likely to inv
olve him in any foolish
questioning by his captors. The safest status is that of stretcher-bearer; faili
ng that, cook. The prospective
prisoner is, therefore, advised to hand himself over to the enemy fully document
ed as either one or the other
of these. This will ensure his safe and immediate accommodation without the dubi
ous benefit of interrogation.
Thereafter life becomes the usual story of buying and selling. The prisoner must
be able to buy what he needs
and, for this purpose, he must have goods to sell. From my own experience, and a
ll the distilled wisdom of
four years* such unscrupulous dealing, I would advise ^m to equip himself before
surrendering with a headful
of gold-filled teeth, as many signet rings as he feels he can decently wear, at
least one Parker pen, possibly
two Rolex waterproof watches (two watches can quite legitimately be worn so long
as they are not both on the
same wrist), and finally a Bengal razor. All these commodities have internationa
l value and should, therefore,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
be readily salable anywhere. Bulkier objects, such as typewriters and motor car
parts, though they command a
good price, are not advisable since they are not so easily recognizable as perso
nal effects and may, therefore,
be confiscated by an unsympathetic foe. This, however, depends entirely upon the
discretion with which one
has selected one's foe.
The prisoner by this time is securely installed in some gaol, or concentration c
amp, or other penal institution
and his physical condition has now passed beyond his controL His well-being henc
e forth depends upon the
supply of medicines, food and clothing which can be ensured for "hfrn by the Red
Cross (in our case, in
Malaya, virtually NIL) and the skill with which he can exchange his various asse
ts for those things of which
he finds he is in need. So much for material aspects of the art of being a priso
ner of war.
But in the mental sphere it is left to the prisoner to make himself or break him
self. He may even kill himself.
There is no one, other than himself, to whom he can turn for spiritual help.
So, even in those early days, I adopted the inflexible philosophy which all who
would survive such
incarcerations as the Japanese offer must adopt
First I determined that I would eat everything thus, cats, dogs, frogs, snakes,
bad fish, bad meat, blown tinned
food, snails, grubs, fungus, crude vegetable oil, green leaves from almost anyth
ing that grew, roots and rubber
nuts all went the same remorseless route.
In addition I determined that I would never complain about any food we did recei
ve because that might
unnerve someone who had just steeled himself to swallow it: similarly, that I wo
uld not tolerate the company
of anyone, however much I liked him, who himself complained. One could have no t
ime for the man who
pointed out to you that your rice was full of weevils one pretended that the wee
vils were not there and ate
them, being grateful for the calorific content they might yield.
I determined that, so long as trees grew leaves, or the earth grass, I would eat
of these products in an effort to
stave off the vitamindeficiency diseases which were already rampaging through me
. It was significant in those
days that the ornamental bushes which grew round the gaol were quickly stripped
of every leaf that grew on
their branches,
Finally, I determined that I would seek help from my friends as seldom as possib
le and expect it never. I
would make my own decisions unaided and abide by them. I would steal whenever an
d wherever possible. I
would keep my mind active by reading what ever I could lay hand to and by talkin
g to whomever could
endure me.
I started this policy of mental activity to ward off mental atrophy by reading t
he Bible, which I found in
Pudu's execution cell, twice. I enjoyed it the second time infinitely less than
I had the first time, and the first
time I had not enjoyed it at all It was with relief that I turned from the high-
flown Hebraic imagery of the
world's best seller to the cynicism of the complete works of George Bernard Shaw
a volume I found one day
whilst a party of us repaired the sadly battered beds of a Japanese brothel, and
which was later to be the cause
of my being involved in much nastiness with a gentleman called Terai That, howev
er, was to come later. For
the moment, armed with G.B.S. and a thousand men to talk to and a diary in which
I entered numerous
uncharitable remarks about Nippon and Nipponese civilization, I felt that, from
the point of view of remaining
articulate and sane, I was adequately equipped.
Life staggered on. Hugh's arm healed up, leaving his fingers badly weakened. I d
eveloped a savage purple
swelling right up the leg which the doctor prodded, leaving a suety dent for hou
rs afterwards. "Edema," he
pronounced which sounded impressive enough to me. Nevertheless, I asked: "Edema
what's that?" and he
replied tersely: "Swelling," which did not please me at all, being no more than
the least medical clod in the
gaol could have told me. The swelling became acutely pa-infill with electric sta
bbings then vanished. Hugh's
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
happy feet drove him to join the sleepless band who every night walked round and
round the second-floor
balcony which flanked the well of the three tiers of cells. Arthur's wind got wo
rse, his figure gaunter and his
blue eyes more glittering. And one day, as our work drew to its bellow-rent clos
e, I turned to Harry and said:
Thank God in another hour we'll all be back at home. 9 * So, after only a few mo
nths, those high
claustrophobic walls, the bare bugridden concrete cells, the crowded patches of
worn grass and that ornate
white fountain which was the communal bath of a thousand men had changed from be
ing a prison to Home.
Life was indeed assuming a different aspect.
The next day, having arrived at the stage where I could think of a cell in a gao
l as "home," Hugh and I
determined to make it so. We mentioned the subject to Arthur and he was enthusia
stic. We set out on the day's
work determined to steal fittings suitable to the embellishment of a room in one
of His Majesty's lousiest
prisons,
At night, when we returned, we had some promising material. Hugh had sent off an
electric light globe and a
lamp shade. Arthur had collected a vase, a small mat, some signal wire and four
nails. I had acquired a
Balinese head in wood and a stool. The stool, during the search, I had sat on an
d it therefore escaped the
guard's attention: but the head (life size), even though I lay it negligently on
the ground and rested my foot on
it as if it were a rock, the guard spotted. Much bellowing and pushing about. Th
en, unfortunately, the
unhealed wounds in my foot began to bleed furiously and (as usual at the sight o
f blood) all the Nips became
very unpleasant.
It was explained to me, by gestures, that my head was about to be rendered as bo
diless as the Balinese one.
Though most reluctant, I was forced to kneel. The guard commander took out his s
word and swished it Then,
advancing left foot foremost, pace at a time in that graceless fashion which the
Japanese swordsman always
uses, and swinging the sword, double-handed, sharply downwards at each step, he
moved towards me.
Finally, with a hoarse "Banzai," he bounded the last few feet and brought his sw
ord down with a resounding
thud. The Balinese head lay beside me cleft in two.
As the Nips laughed uproariously at this demonstration of their national humour,
an Argyll put a hand under
my elbow and helped me to my feet (a service for which I was grateful). We march
ed inside the gaol. When I
sat in my cell a few moments later, a squat, broad-shouldered figure, a coal min
er from Newcastle-on-Tyne,
appeared in the doorway.
"Here's the head you brought back, Aussie," he said, holding it out, "half of it
, anyway," he amended. To bring
in that half head after the demonstration the guard had given of their temper at
that moment was a gesture
which would have taken more courage than I shall ever have. All I could say, tho
ugh, was: "Thanks, Shorty,"
whilst Arthur said: "Good on you, mate," and Hugh curiously examined the wooden
carving.
"That's all right,' said Shorty, rather embarrassed, "I hate those mookers anywa
y," and strode out, through the
grill, back to the British cells.
Pete the ex-fat boy appeared in the doorway.
"Any of you blokes know the leggi number?" he asked.
"No," said Arthur and I together.
"Go away," said Hugh rudely. Sadly Pete left. One could see in his every line th
at no one understood how
hungry he felt.
We stood the half head the face was intact, the back of the skull had been sever
ed on the stool in the corner of
the cell. The signal wire we made into a length of flex and ran it along the top
of the wall out through the
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
door. There, using two of Arthur's four nails, we plugged the flex into the main
gaol power line which ran
along the front of the cells just above door level. Then we fitted Hugh's bulb i
nto the lamp shade, which
included a socket, joined the socket to the flex and to our delight, for none of
us was mechanically inclined we
had light. Pale pink light. Next day Arthur brought home frangipani blooms and t
hat night we sat on the cell
slab, our feet on a mat, our beards gleaming in soft pink light, my map of the w
orld confronting us from the
wall, a delicately carved wooden face gazing at us from the corner, a vase of wh
ite, sweet-scented flowers on
the floor. We felt most elegant The doorway was crowded with admiring soldiery.
Hugh suddenly spun round
from the back wall of the cell against which he had been leaning and jabbed with
an indignant thumb: "Blast
those bloody bugs," he declaimed, and, as he scratched at his left shoulder and
jabbed with his left thumb and
the air became full of that familiar musty smell, the illusion of elegance vanis
hed. Nevertheless, it had been
worth it.
5 TOJO NUMBER TEN
Our community in Pudu received fairly regular injections of fresh blood, which w
ere stimulating to us old
hands even if they involved some personal discomfort to the newcomers. Thus, all
throughout the first six
weeks of our imprisonment, there was a steady stream prisonwards of these "new b
oys" (as they were called).
But by April the stream had slowed down to a trickle a trickle which by its very
smallness attracted more
interest each time it found its way through those big gaol gates.
One of the most interesting of these additions to our number was the case of Mow
att and Elliott. Geoff
Mowatt had been a govern ment official near Tampin in the blissful days of the p
eace. He was cultured, young
and played the cello. Softly spoken, short and curlyhaired, he seemed the last s
ort of person to go irritating the
Japa nese. Nevertheless, he, with Elliott, a dark and rather sombre athlete, had
decided after the capitulation of
Singapore that they would escape.
Accordingly, they climbed through the wire round Changi Camp and made their way
by night to the northern
coast of the island. There they appropriated to themselves a small sampan and tw
o shovels. With the shovels
they then paddled themselves across the causeway to Johore paddled in a brillian
t moonlight which the poetic
cellist found quite beautiful. His more sober companion was not markedly interes
ted in the beauty of a moon
which could so easily make their presence known to the Japanese and urged him te
rsely to concentrate on his
paddling.
They crossed the short gleaming stretch of water undetected and headed north thr
ough Johore. Before they
had gone far, daylight compelled them to lie low. Next night jungle slowed their
progress to a few miserable
miles. Next night both men found themselves laid low with malaria.
Upon the rock of this wretched disease their whole gallant enter prise seemed to
be foundering. Nevertheless,
they compelled themselves to struggle on until eventually they collapsed just ou
tside a Malayan kampong
where they were discovered by natives when daylight dawned.
For a few days the kampong debated what to do with these white men. Then, relyin
g on the extreme illness
and weakness of both, they decided to hand them over to the Japanese and claim t
he reward of several
hundred dollars per head which Nippon offered. They therefore arrived one mornin
g and announced their
intention of so doing.
In spite of their illness, now very grave, both Mowatt and Elliott thought poorl
y of this plan and at once put up
a most spirited oppo sition. This the Malays quashed by laying them low with par
angs a procedure which left
a huge wound gaping in the left side of Mowatt's skull
Thus they arrived in Pudu Mowatt half scalped, yellow with fever and loss of blo
od: Elliott, tall, athletic and,
with his classic beard, looking rather like a Christ. Slowly they were nursed ba
ck to life. The wound in
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Mowatt's head healed into a savage cicatrice: Elliott's fever subsided. Mowatt t
old us their story (Elliott never
talked to anyone) and Pudu settled down once again to its routine of working par
ties, inside-hygiene parties,
sleeping in cells, living in G strings, and bare feet.
Having resurrected all the bridges which our own troops had blown in the course
of their evacuation, the
Imperial Japanese Armybetter known to us as the I.J.A. now required us one morni
ng to remove bombs and
heavy shells from a huge underground dump outside Kuala Lumpur better known as K
.L. and to load them
onto trucks, thence onto trains. We refused.
The Japanese brought out all their machine guns and lined them up opposite our m
utinous squads. They
repeated their request. We agreed.
All that day, and for weeks thereafter, we moved bombs, shells, grenades and exp
losives out of the dark
caverns of the dump. We loaded them onto waiting lorries and then transhipped th
em onto trains. We were
thus making a direct contribution to the Japanese war effort and it was a fact f
or which we did not greatly
admire ourselves. The munitions we manhandled were, we realized, to be used agai
nst our own Allied troops
in New Guinea and the Solo mons.
It was only natural, therefore, that men should attempt to reassert their pride
by various and devious means,
none of which would greatly have recommended themselves to the Nips had they bee
n discovered.
Mortar bombs are extremely susceptible to moisture. Therefore, in the darkest re
cess of that cavern, men
queued up to urinate in case after case of mortar bontbs. It required organizati
on and cun ning to dampen the
maximum number of bombs with the limited facilities (as it were) available. We n
evertheless felt that we had
done well.
Anti-tank guns do not fire very accurately if the rifling in their narrow muzzle
s is blocked. Accordingly, we
poured molten pitch down the barrels a hit-and-run operation which involved the
sacri fice of many a mug or
dixie as a receptacle for this boiling down and carrying to the gun. But it was
done. And for every breechblock
which we scrubbed and scoured free of rust there was one barrel which we sabotag
ed with tar.
Sticks of gelignite and grenades particularly bakelite grenadesare small and eas
ily secreted when one is
practised in the art of secreting. Thus, under the inspired leadership of Frank
Van Rennan, who taught us the
value of cold-blooded bluffing, all those who had headgear wore a hatful of expl
osives back to Pudu. When
we were searched, though our guards looked in all the usual places and any where
else that was even remotely
anatomically feasible, they did not look on our heads. The gaol became infested
with sudden death and as a
result the mass execution with which we were so constantly being threatened assu
med a less one-sided air.
Finally, as we emerged for the last time one shift after a particu larly vile da
y's work in these subterranean
dumps, one of our num ber announced blithely that he had set two booby traps ins
ide which, in his considered
opinion, would start a chain of detonations suffi cient to destroy all the ammun
ition in that hillside and half of
K.L. as well. This remarkable feat was greeted with mixed emotions for several e
xcellent reasons. Those
reasons were, in this order: (1) The gentleman concerned was a sapper and should
, therefore, know his stuff.
(2) The gentleman concerned had not made any particular note in which of the bra
nches of the main tunnel he
had set his booby traps, and could not remember even approximately where they we
re because of the Stygian
gloom inside: and (3) we were all due to return to the dump for more bomb loadin
g the next day.
The prospect of treading on the sapper's booby trap, however uplifting from the
point of view of the Allied
war effort, was gener ally agreed to be depressing as far as the more immediate
problem of oneself surviving
the war was concerned. The most that we could extract from him in the way of enc
ouragement was that a firm
foot step was required to set the booby trap off. We all resolved thence forth n
ever to tread firmly. In our bare
feet the next day, and for a week thereafter, we worked with catlike tread in si
xteen-hour shifts of agonizing
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
apprehension that the booby trap, the dump, Kuala Lumpur and ourselves were all,
in one glorious detonation,
abruptly to ascend heavenwards a fiery tribute to the ingenuity of the Royal Eng
ineers. But for a week there
came no noise more explosive than the shuffling of our own bare soles, and the i
ncessant screaming of our
guards and the rather monotonous thuds of blows as they urged us on to more "Spe
edo." And then the lorries
which were used to carry the ammunition we brought out of the bowels of the eart
h all broke down and the
task was abandoned. In spite both of the sapper and of the fearsome risks incurr
ed by the "grenade runners,"
who so cheerfully followed the example of Van Rennan, we had all survived.
Van Rennan had not so assiduously been acquiring ammunition for nothing. He had
come into the gaol (after
a month's guerilla war fare against the Japanese, in spite of the fact that Sing
apore had fallen) only to save the
native population from further reprisals against his own energetic demolition ac
tivities. Already at that time,
one village of two hundred had had all its menfolk killed and all its women muti
lated because Van Rennan
and his few friends had blown up a Japanese troop train in that area. But though
he had surrendered himself
voluntarily neither he nor his friends intended staying. They proposed leaving t
he gaol as soon as their plans
were complete, heading for the west coast, where they had arranged through nativ
e contacts, for they had all
lived in Malaya as planters before the war for a boat to be waiting for them: an
d from there they were going to
sail to India.
It was an ambitious plan and yet it was by no means hopeless. Van Herman, Harvey
, Graham and two others
had lived in the area and knew it well. They all spoke both Malay and Tamil. The
y had organized a chain of
contacts right across to the coast Those who were to remain behind had perfected
a system whereby the check
parades could be faked to conceal their departure for twenty-four hours.
Thus they hoped to evade capture by the local vigilantes and we hoped to delay t
he hue and cry until they
were well out of the way, and then to protect ourselves from reprisals by inform
ing the guard commander of
their escape as soon, apparently, as it had been made. Of the two the former was
the more difficult operation,
for the Japanese had stirred all the natives in Malaya into a fiercely anti- Eur
opean frame of mind by
promising them that if Europeans escaped from a point A and were recaptured, or
reported, at a point B, then
mass executions would be carried out on all communities between points A and B f
or having condoned that
escape. This meant that travel could only be undertaken by night and that, even
then, it must only be
undertaken by those who looked like natives and talked like them. For this reaso
n a tentative suggestion that I
might join the escapees was abandoned. I had fair hair of a con spicuously un-Ma
layan hue.
In both these respects the escape party itself, however, was well equipped. They
had all acquired sarongs and
native shoes and shirts: they were dark: they all spoke the local dialects. More
over, they had stolen sufficient
food to enable them to do the whole journey to the coast without asking for any
help from the native
population, and they had ample grenades with which to defend themselves if that
regrettable contingency
should arise.
To make up their numbers to an adequate crew for a trip across the Indian Ocean
in an open boat, they
accepted two recruits. One an Australian named Bell: the second a young Dutchman
called Jan who, as
co-pilot of a Wildebeeste, had already survived death when his plane crashed in
flames and he found himself
without a para chute. He had climbed to the tail of the blazing plane the only p
ortion not alight and when it
struck the earth, he had been cata pulted hundreds of feet through the air into
the soft foliage of the top of a
high Jungle tree. He had climbed down unharmed and wandered round for a few days
until eventually he
found his pilot, badly burned, at the foot of another tree. The two had been han
ded over to the Nips by
Malays. Jan was generally agreed to be lucky and his acquisition by the escape p
arty was accepted by all as an
omen of its success.
The big night came and the party left the gaol silently by the side gate, the lo
cks of which had been receiving
their attention for some time past. Early next morning we Australians fell in on
the check parade with the task
of covering up for the departure of Jan and Bell. Though this was simple enough,
it was worrying because it
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
had to succeed the first time. If the little Nip miscounted the four men who ask
ed his permission at the
beginning of the parade to go to the latrine (two of whom instead took up blank
positions carefully left for
them in the rear rank), then he would recount our whole parade and then go over
to the latrines and count the
men there. Then we would be two short. Then there would be explanations to make,
which would be difficult.
And it was quite possible, knowing the Nipponese standards of addition, that by
adding four alleged absentees
to the total of the men who stood before him, the guard who rejoiced in the name
of "Frogf ace" would NOT
reach the total which was daily required of our particular squad.
It was with considerable relief, therefore, that we heard Trim say, at the concl
usion of his count:
"Ol^gaya%um6 [OJL stand at ease]." Now all that remained to be seen was whether
three similar such bluffs
had worked with three of Frogf ace's equivalents on three other check parades so
that all the escapees were
covered. It was not until the figures for the entire gaol had been received and
checked against the figures of
the day before that any one parade was dis missed, so we had to stand there and
wait.
Harry stood beside me and laughed. He was one of those to whom the task of askin
g for permission to go to
the latrines and then joining the back rank had been allotted.
"The raw prawn of all time," he commented, "and Frogface fell for it Get on to h
im,' he urged me, pointing a
contemptuous finger, "will you just get on to him?" So we watched Trim approach
us: Harry with open scorn,
I with considerable anxiety. Would he dismiss us or would one of the other squad
s have slipped up, which
would involve the whole gaol in a recount?
"Okayga," he grunted, "all men go." We were dismissed and the escape party now h
ad twelve hours start.
That was the theory of it. Unfortunately, the practice was different Before they
had even cleared the outskirts
of K.L. the small band of escapees had been seized by natives and had been force
d to fight their way free.
Twice more during the night march natives at tempted to grapple with them and at
dawn a large patrol of Jap
anese infantry had suddenly surrounded them as they studied their maps. Escape w
as impossible and to
attempt to fight was suicidal. They therefore surrendered with the best grace po
ssible.
At lunchtime they were back in the gaol their return witnessed by a horrified co
mmunity of prisoners. They
were shackled, looked badly shaken and pale and were not allowed near us. We sho
uted out to them and they
smiled back wanly. They were taken to the cells above the guardhouse the ones we
had all originally inhabited
before our move to the main wing of the gaol.
We asked could we give them some food. The request was re fused. Instead the gua
rd commander asked some
very awkward questions as to just how, with eight men missing, the gaol had neve
rtheless managed to return
its full numbers on the morning check parade. Without any hesitation at all, the
blame was cast squarely upon
the shoulders of Frogface and his three revolting friends and their combined ina
bility to count. Though this
was not very feasible and did not really endear us to Frogface or his three frie
nds it served for the moment to
addle the guard commander, who retired to think it over.
In a manner typically Japanese, when he did think it over, he went off at a tang
ent and arrived at a completely
different but most unwelcome conclusion. The recaptured men, he recollected, had
had in their possession
grenades. There might, he thought, be other grenades in the gaol. Fortunately he
said so to one of the guards
and the English duty officer, who was a bright lad, heard Mm,
Consequently when, five minutes later, the guard suddenly swept through cell blo
ck after cell block looking
for bombs, they swept through just three minutes behind two officers and a rice
sack. Into the rice sack went
every piece of explosive material we possessed. As the tour continued, the sack
grew heavier, but the officers
strug gled gamely on until they had collected all the incriminating evi dence. T
hen, just about thirty seconds
ahead of the guard who were now very bad-tempered indeed they lugged the sack ou
t into the British
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
courtyard, dragged it to the fountain which was our communal bath and deposited
it and its contents into the
top of the tall lily-shaped basin out of which the water spouted into the main f
ountain below. When the guards
appeared in the courtyard, they observed two childish officers playing rather si
lly games in the water. With
curt "Currahs" they ordered them out and sent them packing. Then they themselves
went back to the
guardhouse and reported that there were no grenades in the gaol We resumed our b
reathing.
It became fairly obvious, after two days in which they had been allowed no food,
no water and no latrine
facilities, that the Japanese were evilly disposed towards our escape party. Van
Rennan himself sensed this
and managed to throw a note into the main triangular courtyard urging us to ask
for clemency towards Bell
and Jan, both of whom were only in their very early twenties. This was done and
the Japanese seemed
agreeably inclined towards the request, nod ding their heads and saying, "Baby-k
a," many times.
But, in spite of their head-noddings, the next morning we saw the whole party su
ddenly appear in the gaol's
entrance just outside the guardhouse. AH their gear had been dumped near them ha
ver sacks and clothing but
they themselves were still fiercely shackled and were filthy dirty. They looked
very weak.
The Japanese motioned them towards the gaol gate. Enquiringly, Van Rennan gestur
ed with his foot towards
the pile of kit bags. The Japanese nodded negatively, emphatically. It could mea
n only one thing. They knew
it: and we knew it.
They were brave men, those eight. Their heads went up, and while we shouted chee
rful remarks at them,
trying not to let them know what we sensed, they grinned back at us so that we s
houldn't sense what they
knew. They went through the big gate. Whenever one of them turned our way, a mas
s smile would appear on
all the strained faces that watched their departure. As soon as their backs were
turned, the smile vanished.
They were prodded and shoved, clumsy with their arms and legs bound, into a truc
k. They turned to face us;
we smiled. The guard spoke to them: they looked down at him: our smiles vanished
. The guard stopped
speaking: they looked up: we smiled. Then the truck lurched off and the big gate
s shut.
They were gone. "There," I thought with a lump in my throat, "but for the grace
of a mop of sun-bleached
hair, goes Braddon."
The Indian who drove the truck told us later that they were taken to K.L. cemete
ry, there made to dig their
own graves and then shot down into them. So ended the first, most promising and
last escape plot of Pudu.
A month later, as if to compensate us for the loss of eight of our best men, two
more Argylls were brought in.
Theirs was a proud but sad tale. Cut off at Slim River, forty Argylls had fought
a private war for weeks in the
jungle until their ammunition vanished. Undaunted, they built themselves a palm-
frond shelter and settled
down to live a life of freedom in occupied Malaya until the British reinvaded.
Malaria attacked them. One after the other died. Carefully each was buried and a
cross with his name and
number placed on his grave. By July only four remained. One day all four fell il
l and two died. The remaining
two buried them and thenrealizing that they had not long to go and yearning for
the company they had heard
was to be found in Pudu Gaol they handed themselves up to the Japanese.
They came to us emaciated and dying. But for their last few days they had plenty
of company, comrades who
talked their own almost unintelligible dialect, and as much comfort as we could
bestow. When they died they
seemed happy enough.
The year was now jogging steadily along in this strange life. The Emperor of Jap
an to our unanimous regret
survived yet another birthday (the occasion being celebrated by the lavish gift
to each man of two half-inch
cubes of canned pineapple). Beards were lux uriant and coiffures poetic. We even
played fiercely contested
games of baseball on the communal triangle of lawn a practice which ceased abrup
tly when we defeated a
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
team put up by our guards. Our nightly dreams about food quaint phantasies of ch
ocolate Eclairs mixed with
steak and served heavily garnished with eggbecame less recurrent and sometimes s
tayed away for as long as a
week on end. Meantime, our own meagre ration of rice was dis tributed with machi
nelike smoothness, a faint
flavour being added to it by the addition of the few native vegetables we grew i
n the gaol garden (mainly a
Malayan root most aptly named ubi kayuwhich means "wooden potato").
Tokyo time was applied to all towns in Malaya. We were ordered to talk only in t
erms of Tokyo time. We
accordingly stole an old clock and placed it prominently in our cell block. It a
lways read British Malayan time
and we ordered our life by it. A foolish gesture, perhaps, but, in a life where
little more than gestures was
possible, most gratifying!
The Japanese declared generously that they would pay us for our work ten cents a
day. Thus, if one worked
every day of the month, one earned the lavish sum of three dollars. This would b
uy a small handful of dried
fish, a little coconut oil in which to fry it, and perhaps a banana or two. (Ban
anas became almost a "must" on
one's shopping list, because they were reported to contain Vitamin E. And Vitami
n E, we were told, combated
the sterility with which we were all threatened by our M.O. if the rice diet con
tinued which it gave every
indication of doing for years. )
As soon as we received our pay, we seized the opportunity to do something for th
e men who lay day after day
in the hospital in our courtyard. We all gave twenty-five cents from our three d
ollars and this Padre
Duckworth took into town with him and with it bought soap and food and odd titbi
ts. No money was ever
better invested. It was sheer delight to see the faces of those near corpses, wh
o for weeks and months had been
living a life of the most complete squalor, as the little padre dished out his p
urchases to each one.
We resolved that we would make the same contribution each month. An officer, wit
h the soul of a born
Socialist pleasure wrecker, suggested that the scheme was, in fact, a form of he
alth insurance from which any
man who fell ill would benefit. He was howled down with the greatest promptness.
In our Me, where we
mostly had nothing to give, we were not thus lightly to be deprived of our oncem
onthly opportunity to be
human. It remained a direct gift to the sick and after the first payday we were
delighted when the Pommies
announced their intention of "being in it." For the next six months there was al
ways cash in hand to buy
anything within reason for a sick man who needed it whether it was black market
drugs or black market food.
We also, at this time, learnt how to increase our own comfort by laying any piec
es of wearing apparel which
became louse-infested on ants* nests. The ants then devoured not only the lice b
ut also their eggs, which they
laid deep in seams and un-get-at-able corners. Having rid ourselves of the itch
of lice, the next step was to rid
our selves of the itch of beards. We drew up a roster and one by one had our bea
rds removed with a razor
ground out by Harry from a Japanese bayonet he had stolen. It was not a comforta
ble operation (Harry himself
described his laboriously ground-down blade as "rough as guts"), but thenceforwa
rd we were clean-shaven
that is, We each had one shave a week which, by the standards of those days, was
clean-shaven. Our barber
was none other than Jack MulHns his bomb-torn throat now healed who, equipped wi
th scissors and clippers
as well (these latter mysteriously acquired by the padre), kept us all fairly ti
dy.
Strangely enough, our life was almost totally devoid of friction. It is remarkab
le to record that in the Pudu
community of one thou sand, and the Changi community, which "fluctuated between
seven and seventeen
thousand, and all the camps in Thailand, over a period of four years, there were
no cases of murder,
remarkably few of theft (from our own men, that is the Nips, of course, were fai
r game) and only three
suicides. Very few other such large communi ties over such a long period could b
oast similarly. It was a
tribute to the Anglo-Saxons* ability to live together one which was in marked co
ntrast to the Dutch camps
and, later, an Italian influx, all of whom brawled incessantly.
It was natural, however, that such an environment should breed extreme philosoph
ies. Every cell had its rabid
Communist, or its rabid atheist, or its rabid Roman Catholic. There were only tw
o qualifications to anything
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
one thought or did in those days. The first, that you should tolerate other peop
le being equally as extreme as
yourself even though diametrically opposed to yourself. The second, that your op
inions and actions should
never fall within that category known to Australians as "bludging on your mates"
in other words, that they
should never conflict with the common well-being.
There were, of course, cases where the border line was difficult to determine. T
hus, in Pudu a small groupvery
small became fanati cally religious and convinced themselves that all ills could
be cured solely by faith. Part
of their way of life consisted of calling everyone even the most improbable type
s brother": part in praying
vociferously and fervently at all sorts of unexpected times (during the course o
f which praying they banged
their foreheads on the gaol's concrete floors with thuds that were quite distres
sing) : and part in refusing even
such little medical treatment as was available.
Since they all had ulcers and dysentery, it was a fine point of gaol ethics whet
her they should be forcibly
treated or allowed to pursue their own path of prayer, which on specified dates
was to be fol lowed by
miraculous cures. When the cult showed no signs of spreading it was generally ac
cepted that they were
entitled to their own point of view. And when a month, later the last of the sma
ll group died (the requisite
miracle on the appointed day having failed to materialize), religious fanaticism
vanished forever from
prisoner-of-war life as I saw it
We were sent to a lime kiln, quite a large group of us, to load lime that is, to
bag it up and put it on lorries. A
filthy job, which scorched all the oil out of one's skin, leaving it cracked and
leathery. And when you sweated
the lime burnt holes in the flesh small black holes that you couldn't clean out,
so they just grew deeper.
An Australian jacked up and was soon afterwards sent back to the gaol unconsciou
s for his pains. But when
the whole party returned at night, he had warned our friends at home what was ha
ppening and they were re^dy
for us,
As we marched in our legs and arms covered in those black burning holes we were
seized by the waiting
Pudu-ites, stripped and thoroughly anointed with coconut oil. Every ounce of oil
in the gaol bought with those
hard-earned three dollars a month was there waiting for us. We were smeared and
rubbed down as lavishly as
if it grew by the thousand gallons in our gaol courtyard. It made no difference
who you were, what your unit
or nationality you were smeared and rubbed, then smeared again, until at last al
l those black burns were clean
of the lime that burnt into them and all the precious oil had gone.
It was another of those moments when the friendship of one's fellow men and the
warmth of their generosity
made the life of Pudu well worth while. Forty of us had consumed the oil supply
of a thousand. And to the
accompaniment of the Australians Tou'll be right, mate," and the Pommies* "Just
a niinute, choom, while I
put some more on your back," we were made to feel that, except as a solvent of l
ime, coconut oil was utterly
unimportant.
A party of Australians went to work one day on tlie outskirts of K.L. We worked
in one of those chaotic
dumps in which the Japanese seem to specialize. It contained lengths of railway
line, mortar bombs, drums of
petrol, three anti-tank guns, coils of barbed wire and signal wire, a few Mills
bombs and a wireless set Army
type. We stacked the petrol, re-coiled the wire, wet the mortar bombs in the tra
ditional manner, shovelled sand
into the breech mechanism of the guns, loaded the railway lines onto trucks and
endured all day the bellows of
"Currah" and "Bugero" from an even more than usually repulsive little Nip.
At the end of the day this worthy was laying about him with his naked bayonet a
habit common to most
guards, and one of their less endearing traits and had laid open the flesh on tw
o foreheads already* It seemed
only fair then that, while one of the lads set a Mills-bomb booby trap among the
petrol drums, the rest of us at
the instigation of a sergeant called Robbie should steal the wireless set.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The set was bundled into a rice bag and slung swiftly and un ceremoniously from
one man to another as we
were searched. At the gaol we had another search and felt a certadn apprehension
. It is remarkable how
prominent a field radio in a sack can seem on a search parade. In the midst of t
his search, however, the
Almighty weighed in heavily on our side with a sudden violent tropical storm. Sh
outing, "Damm6 9 damme:
taxan am6 [This is no good to me too much rain]," our searchers lost all interes
t in their quest for contra band
and scuttled back to the guardroom. We strolled casually past them and down to o
ur cells Robbie bearing a
sackful of potential B.B.C. news bulletins slung negligently over his shoulder.
A few weeks later the set under the loving care of the small group of officers t
o whom it had been entrusted
was coaxed into contacting London. For the first time, the resounding triumphs o
f Duckworth's well-dressed
Eurasian gave way to official news. We found the switch-over quite effortless we
had now reached the stage
where we could instantly adjust ourselves to anything. Thus, it cost us no grief
that whereas the padre's
mythical Eurasian had encouraged us with reports of tank battles in Rumania betw
een triumphant Russians
and routed Germans the B.B.C. now reported that the Germans were racing down on
Stalingrad. The fact that
for the first time in eight months we had contact with "Home" almost compen sate
d for the lack of letters to or
from our families. The completely irrational confidence in ultimate victory whic
h ran through the veins of
every man more than countered the momentary shock of the events of late 1942. To
the accompaniment of the
Nazis* boasts about the imminent destruction of Russia and the capture of Suez,
with the shrill demands of
the Nips that India should join the Co-Prosperity Sphere and Australia abandon t
he cause of the British
exploiters ringing out all around us, we left the gaol each day to work. But we
left more content than ever
before in 1942 because we now had what all prisoners of war crave more than anyt
hing else news from Home,
better known in those days (for security reasons) as Ice Cream!
A new field of work was opened up for us by the Jap decision to move everything
in the Austin works from
wherever it was in the building to some other place in the building. The Jap eng
ineers who supervised this
task were quite the most evil-tempered gentlemen we ever encountered.
During one of our midday breaks, an N.C.O. approached us to air his knowledge of
English and gloat War,"
he announced, "finish-u soon."
"Go on, eh, Nippon?" Harry encouraged him "How's that?"
"Birrima, you know?" asked the Nip we said yes, we knew Burma, a word the Japs c
ould never master.
Tndiah, you know?" asked the Nip we said yes, we knew India.
"Australian, you know?" asked the Nip we said yes, we knew Australia (and an Arg
yll added testily, "Och,
mon, cut oot the geography and tell us your news"),
"New Zealand, you know?" asked the Nip wearily we said yes.
"All," said the Nip, with an embracing gesture towards his own bosom, "all Nippo
n." We laughed heartily and
the round yellow face with the shaved eyebrows and the brown eyes glittering wen
t as close to a flush of rage
as the Japanese can manage. Exercising all of his limited self-control, the Nip
produced the daily newspaper
printed in K.L. printed in English because no one could read Jap aneseand pointe
d to the headlines. We
Australians took one look and became convulsed at once with laughter.
"Nippon's Warrior Gods of the Air Destroy Outer Suburbs of Broome," the paper an
nounced grandiosely. We
laughed and kughed and determined to back us up, though not really under standin
gthe Pommies laughed, too.
In between outbursts, we explained to the Pommies that Broome whose outer suburb
s the Nips claimed to
have destroyed contained one makeshift air strip and about four tin sheds. The l
aughter became louder as this
information spread and the Nip flushed deeper. Finally, his hand, as always when
in doubt, flew to the
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
bayonet that hung from his second belt.
"Nippon Number One," he screamed. A solid chorus of British voices assured him t
hat Nippon, on the
contrary, was Number Ten.
*Tojo Number One," he bellowed, his eyes bloodshot and slashed the Argyll neares
t him, who, looking as
indifferent as if he had Been stung by a mosquito, replied: "Churchill Number On
e Tojo Num ber Two
Hundred." The hysterical Nip looked to the rest of us for confirmation of this a
stounding statement. We did
not fail him.
"Churchill Number One Tojo Number Two Hundred," we dedared with authority. It wa
s on! Our party was at
once fallen in in two ranks and the entire guard, armed with lumps of timber, th
en marched up and down
slugging anyone whose face did not appeal to them which, I must admit, seemed to
be most of us. There is
something in the British physiognomy which, it would appear, is most disagreeabl
e to all Japanese.
After twenty minutes, the mass bashing still continued and the Nips far from get
ting over it by their outburst
seemed only to be whipping themselves up into a state of murder. Half a dozen of
them ran, flailing
indiscriminately, their faces contorted, up and down our lines. It was ceasing t
o be amusing. This was another
of those occasions when the lighthearted bashing had passed into the realms of p
ossible massacre. Our
survival now depended upon our taking everything standing upright and in silence
(to fall to the ground or to
complain was a stimulant which, under these conditions, always sent the Japs com
pletely out of control).
Typically, the Nips picked on the biggest man on the parade--an Australian. Stan
ding before him, the smallest
guard hit him with everything he had. Lumps of wood, his bayonet, his rifle, his
fist.
The Australian took it all expressionlessly. Both ranks of men stiffened with re
vulsion and a muttering broke
out. Another few seconds, and, consequences regardless, discretion would be aban
doned and the Nips
disposed of once and for all. It was an Argyll who saved us.
Leaping out of the front rank, the little Scot, no taller than the Nip, young an
d furious, sprang on the guard
and rocked him to the foundations of his web-toed canvas boots with a clicking l
eft to the chin.
The silence that ensued was startling. The Nip stood dazed with blood trickling
from the right-hand corner of
the mouth. All the other guards stood with their hands on their bayonets. Two ra
nks of prisoners waited, tense.
The Scot faced the Nip.
"Leave the Aussie alone, you animal," the Argyll said quietly, his left foot sti
ll forward and his fists, though
only half clenched, at the ready. On his bare forearm two tattooed hands clasped
each other firmly. It was the
only friendly thing about that forearm just then. "Leave him alone," he repeated
. The Nip moved, raising a
hand slowly to his mouth to wipe it. Then, as he lowered the hand and noticed th
e blood on his fingers, the
stillness broke. He screamed with rage and flung himself at the Argyll. Simultan
eously the other guards hurled
themselves forward and, before we could move, the youngster was lying broken on
the ground. The episode
was over. We Australians carried him back to the gaol. We did what we could. The
re was nothing he could
not have had so long as we ourselves had it. He died a few days later.
Wherever there are two or three gathered together who come from the United Kingd
om, there you will have
song. Listening to the Pommies singing was quite a favourite pastime with us Aus
tralians. Lacking their
unself-consciousness about singing (not to mention their skill in harmony, and t
heir voices), we seldom burst
into song ourselves: but we enjoyed them. The corridors of gaols make excel lent
sounding boards for songs
well sung, and not many nights passed without a good lump of vocal nostalgia fro
m our neighbours after
darkness had fallen. It was pleasant or sad, I'm not sure which to go out to the
courtyard as they sang so
strongly and pick out the stars that form the Southern Cross lying low and sidew
ays over the cookhouse roof.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The stars were about the only things in those days at which one could look and f
eel "well, at home, at this
time, they can see that too," In the absence of any letters between us there was
some little comfort to be
derived from that thought.
It did not do, though, to go too far out into the courtyard because, if one did,
the voices faded a little and one
heard instead the Nips in their camp further down the road chanting out the fier
ce tri umphant notes of their
victory song a strident marching song to which they added a new verse for each f
resh conquest. It now
contained altogether too many verses. I wondered whether they would have the dec
ency to lop off a verse
each time one of their conquests was retaken. Hugh said he was certain they woul
dn't
But as well as the noise of Nips singing, if you went far out into the courtyard
, there was the sight of tropical
lightning, which flashed and flared on the horizon and which a hundred times sin
ce our captivity had had us
out there thinking: "This time it's shellfire. This time our people have landed
over there on the coast," and we
would go back inside (because the guard got cranky if one stayed out more than t
he few minutes required for
the visit to the latrine one was alleged to be making) and inside we would stand
with our faces against the
bars, our fingers round them, trying to make out if those flares and flashes rea
lly were bombs and shells.
Then, late in the night, we would give up hope and crawl back to our cells to li
e on the concrete, whilst
upstairs indifferent to everything except their own pain padded round and round,
round and round, the
haggard band of those who suffered from happy feet.
The happy-feet men were, with those who suddenly succumbed to cardiac beriberi,
our main worry now. Two
or three times a week in the midst of our massaging the soles of those whose fee
t pained them a man would
suddenly fall flat on his face, smacking it on the concrete with the sound of an
apple splitting open, and when
one turned him over he was dead. Cardiac beriberi the heart, suddenly seized by
lack of vitamins, stopped.
There was no warning, no symptoms, just that sudden noise like a splitting apple
, and death. A disconcerting
disease to have in one's midst.
And the happy-feet cases seemed to be losing interest in life. Though we set asi
de the best of our rations as
supplementary diet for them rich vegetable stews that made the mouth pour with w
ater they were not
interested. They were too tired even to collect it at mealtimes. Too languid to
eat it if you brought it to them. I
became alarmed when Hugh at last refused his helping of the delicious stew I mad
e almost daily by
scavenging vegetable peelings from the Nips garbage heaps.
"What shall I do?" I asked the M.O.
"Leave him alone," the M.O. advised. "They must be left so alone that they're co
mpelled to do everything for
themselves. Then they might feel hungry again. Then they might eat. It's hard, I
know, but they must be left
alone."
So, feeling like a murderer particularly when I caught the startled look in Hugh
's blue eyes as I deserted him
each mealtime I left him alone. It was a most difficult decision.
Roused at last by the lamentable absence of our own voices from the nightly sess
ions of song, we Australians
laid our plans. First we negotiated with the Japanese for a piano which we had s
een in a brothel of theirs.
Pianos, we pointed out, were not essential in brothels. Indifferently, they agre
ed. Could we have it? Since we
could not eat it, nor put it on sores, and since they themselves could not play
it, they again agreed. Pudu Gaol
thus acquired its first musical instrument.
We then started working to put on a show. Whilst all those who had any pretences
to a voice practised
assiduously at such indige nous products as "Waltzing Matilda" and "The Maoris F
arewell," another group of
us frantically rehearsed the well-known lines of "Pansy, the Mill Girl," and a v
ery vulgar ballet We rehearsed
in the cell set aside for coffin making an essential industry in our life but en
joyed ourselves nevertheless. The
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
songs, the melodrama of Pansy (especially the lines when the villain sharpens a
knife on his boot and his
equally villainous daughter enquires: "Father, what are you doing with that knif
e?"
"Whist," says Papa still sharpening.
"But, Father..."
"Whist," says Papa, emphatically.
"But, Father," persists the girl, who, though villainous, is literal, "you don't
play whist with a knife" to which
Papa, most sensibly, retorts: "Shut up!"), all these, and the ballet, went down
enormously well.
The concert was staged at one end of the wall between the cell floors in the Bri
tish lines. It was watched with
wild enthusiasm by the gaol's entire population including the guards tier upon t
ier of spectators gazing down
into the well. It reached its unparalleled climax when, in the ballet, Jack Menz
ies decided that it would be
more spectacular if, instead of catching his partner as he (or rather "she") sai
led through the air, he refrained
from catching him (or rather "her")! As Jack Deloas soared into space, aiming hi
mself accurately at the
outstretched arms of Menzies, the gunner accordingly folded those arms over his
hairy bosom and watched
the furious infantryman hurtle past. To ecstatic cries of "Encore, en core," the
show concluded and we all sang
"God Save the King" a song in which the Japanese joined with enthusiasm because
it, along with "Dinah,"
seemed to be one of the few Western tunes they knew.
From then onwards, once a week, we had concerts after the day's work. The office
rs gave a concert, the
Pommies gave three or four. Wild Gaelic laments, so dear to the hearts of the Hi
ghland regi ments, became
well known to us: the Welsh sang hymns and Army songs with equal facility and en
joyment: the Englishmen
roared "Bless TEm All." They were nights of deep nostalgia, those concert nights
when the Pommies sang. It
was an enjoyable nostalgia, though. At those moments Pudu Gaol seemed a real hom
e.
And at this stage, quite unexpectedly, the Nips suddenly announced: "All men go
to Singapore." We were not
to be shot after all. Some said this was because the Australian Government had m
ade a ges ture to Nippon by
sending home the ashes of all the Japanese sailors who were killed in the suicid
e midget submarine attack on
Sydney Harbour. Some said it was because they wanted to ship us to New Guinea to
use as a bargaining
weapon in their propaganda cam paign urging Australians to withdraw from the war
. Some said it was just
Japanese bastardry. Whatever it was, in November of 1942 we left and for the fir
st time experienced that
strange prisoner-of-war obsession of being reluctant to abandon what one had mad
e one's home. Only once
did I know men to leave a camp without considerable anguish that was from Kanchi
naburi in Thailand to re
turn to Singapore. And that, of course, was rather different.
So we were split up into parlies, mainly according to nationalities, and left. T
he Australians were one of the
first parties to go. The entire gaol fell out to say good-bye: presents were exc
hanged be tween "Pommies" and
"Aussies" (miserable gifts like the small lump of gulah malacca a brown sugary s
ubstance given to me by
Geoff Mowatt, the cellist who had escaped from Singapore: miserable gifts that m
eant more than most we had
ever received before). As those who remained for later parties shouted and waved
, led by the little padre, we
marched out of Pudu's big gates for the last time. We marched out leaving the ho
spital in our courtyard and
the fountain full of hand grenades and my map on the wall. Carrying our sick, we
headed down the long road
to the railway station. This time the natives did not spit at us and stone us th
ey had already had a belly ful of
Co-Prosperity. Everywhere we noticed the desolation which Japanese administratio
n had brought. The drains
blocked and foul: pools of water dotted round breeding ground for the anopheles,
and malaria already rampant
in K.L.: the demented mobs waiting outside the Opium Centre further refinement o
f Japanese civilization,
whereby they induced the craving and then maintained ruth less control of the ad
dicts by being themselves the
sole distributors: the once immaculate padangs now rank with high grass and weed
s.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
We clambered into cattle trucks, steel and covered in, thirty or more to a truck
. We lay the men with happy
feet flat on the floor of the truck, then huddjed ourselves in what space remain
ed. In the centre of the truck, in
between the doors in either wall, sat two guards, back to back, watching over us
. There was a dixie of cooked
rice for the trip, rice which was already sour with fermentation. Looking at it
longingly, Pete said: "What's the
leggi number?" at which Hugh snarled something unintelligible from his place on
the floor and Harry, smiling
his most crooked smile, said quietly: "Pete, the main reason why I'm so glad we'
re going to Singapore is that
there I shouldn't ever have to see or hear you again."
The train started. A day and a half later we reached Singapore. There, eighty or
ninety to an Army lorry, we
were driven to Changi the camp of about ten thousand Allied prisoners of war on
the northeastern tip of the
island. The second phase of our P.O.W. life had begun.
6. THE PHONY CAPTIVITY
If 1940 France was the phony war, 1942 Changi was certainly the phony captivity.
To us who came from
Pudu, it was unbelievable.
We arrived in our truckloads and were greeted with a certain official aloofness
by a duty officer. This latter at
once addressed us dispassionately upon our duties as prisoners of war and the ne
ed for discipline subjects on
which we were all of us infinitely better in formed than he. He then lost intere
st in us and said: "All right,
gentlemen, break off." So we broke off. Howls of rage. "Gentlemen," it appeared,
meant only officers, of
whom there were two in our midst: the remainder of us were emphatically not, he
gave us to understand,
gentlemen.
Gentlemen and scum alike, we Pudu-ites gazed at Tifrn with growing hostility and
prepared not to like
Changi. The man beside me, who in K.L., by virtue of his ability to lead and the
guts which had carried him
from Parit Sulong to Yong Peng on a bullet-torn leg, had been one of our leaders
, and who now by virtue of
his two pipswas one of the blessed few entitled to break off, stood his ground a
nd said loudly: "Christ
Almighty." That made us all laugh and when the duty officer tersely remarked: "A
ll right, Mr. McLeod, fall
out," he did so to the accompaniment of amused comments from the rest of us of:
"Ta-ta, Rod see you in
Australia," and "Oh, Mr. McLeod, sir, your slip's showing." The duty officer was
incensed at such frivolity
and asked us what we thought this was. Harry re plied, "Bush week," and the duty
officer thereupon having
lost the initiative entirely dismissed us.
Changi was phony not because of the mass of men in it but be cause of the offici
al attitude behind its
administration. The com mand determined to maintain full military discipline and
establish ments, regardless
of circumstances or psychology, waiting upon the day when Malay would be invaded
by a British force.
Accordingly, two principles seemed to guide every decision. One, to retain full
divisional and regimental
staffs pottering round achieving nothing useful at all in divisional and regimen
tal offices: two, to preserve the
Officers Other Rank distinction by as many tactless and unneces sary orders as c
ould be devised.
This latter was equally hard on both parties. It meant that officers could not f
reely mix with their friends who
were OJEL s, nor O.R,'S with officers. It meant that O.R,'s were compelled to sa
lute officers whom they had
seen cowering in terror at the bottom of a slit trench as well as those who had
done a good job. It meant that
O.R,'s were compulsorily stripped of clothing which (at their own discretion and
on their own backs) they had
carried from Singapore seventeen miles out of Changi, so that these garments mig
ht be distributed to officers
who though they did not work must, it was deemed, at all times be well dressed.
It meant that officers, far
from waiting till their men ate and then eating the same food themselves, ate un
der orders in a separate mess
and usually before the men. It meant that officers were allowed to keep poultry,
O.R,'S were not. It meant that
therewas fuel for an officers* club to cook light snacks, for the O.R,'S there w
as not.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
All of which casts no reflections upon the officers concerned any more than it d
id upon the men. They were
under orders. Those orders were inspired by a sincere conviction at top level th
at it was absolutely necessary
in the cause of an imminent invasion, which, in fact, never came to preserve the
class distinction by privileges
not based upon responsibility. It is no cause for complaint But as a most relati
ve factor in the life of those
days, and one of the things most difficult then to comprehend, it must be record
ed.
In the same way, to the naive Pudu-ite, Changi had other shocks. The docile acce
ptance of Tokyo time as the
camp standard rather than the old British time to which we in K.L. had clung so
tena ciously. The ceremonial
parades at which we were handed from N.C.O. to N.C.O. and officer to officer unt
il, hours later, we were
dismissed all so that the Japanese might know how many of us still languished in
their custody. The rash of
concert parties and theatres dozens of them playing each night: everything from
Androdes and the Lion to
Army smoke-ohs. The drug-selling ring which shamelessly traded M. and B. tablets
from our own British
hospitaltablets more priceless than diamonds for bully beef from the Malays and
Chinese. A ring which could
not publicly be stamped out because, it was once rumoured, an M.O. was one of it
s members (he left the keys
of the drug store where the stooges could pick them up) and because some senior
officers were also involved
and to prosecute them would be "bad for morale." For whose? we Pudu-ites wondere
d.
Then there were the Spivs of Changi men with courage and no scruples who went ou
tside the wire each night
to collect tinned food from old Army dumps in the rubber and then returned to se
ll their booty at black market
prices to their brethren back in camp. Every community has its villainsand Chang
fs preoccupation with such
laudable though impractical conceptions as respect for officers and salutes ther
eto allowed its villains a scope
which to those of us who had lived the fraternal life of K.L. was nauseating.
But if these follies and blacker sides of human nature became obvious to us for
the first time in Changi, so did
other things which were wholly delightful. For one thing, we hardly ever saw the
Jap anese (and the ideal life
is, of course, one in which one never sees any Japanese). For another, the commo
n man of Changi greeted us
with overwhelming warmth. We had all been posted "Missing, Be lieved Killed" for
nine months and though,
upon our return to the fold, we ruined many a model honour roll upon which we ha
d optimistically been
inscribed as "dead," we were, nevertheless, made to feel most welcome.
Thus, all of us found ourselves equipped with a shirt and a pair of shorts and b
oots. And Piddington, whom I
had last seen when I left him at Yong Peng at the beginning of the year, gave me
a tooth brush and a pack of
Gibb's toothpaste delightful gift after so long using a finger and ground-up cha
rcoal. The men of Changi were
solid gold right through, as men, on the whole, always are.
And as well as the men and the lack of Japs, there were the miles of grass and t
he trees and the hospital.
Changi Camp was made up by the Barrack Square of what had been the Selarang Garr
ison; plus all its
outhouses, officers, W.O,'s and sergeants quarters; plus Rob erts Garrison, acro
ss the valley, and its attendant
quarters. Selarang had been given to the Australians: Roberts three quarters of
a mile away and separated by a
quarter mile of no man's land heavily patrolled by Nips and Sikhs was made the h
ospital and British and
Dutch area.
The hospital, though badly bomb-damaged (like most of tie buildings in Changi),
was a joy. It had beds and
sheets: anaesthetics and drugs: instruments and an operating theatre. Though the
re was not a hundredth of
what was required, at least there was something. To it went all our happy-feet c
ases and, for the first time
since they were stricken, we felt that they had a chance of getting better.
An extra fillip was given to one's sense of well-being in Changi by the sudden a
rrival at this time of a few Red
Cross parcels and some mail. Though most of us did not get letters, we all recei
ved a couple of cigarettes and
the flavouring of our rice ration with these few newly arrived tins of condensed
milk and bully beef made a
most welcome change. The main thing, though, was that something from the outside
world had got through to
us. Unfortunately it was more than a year before a second tiny consignment (one
parcel to each forty men)
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
arrived, and the same interval again before the third and final issue was allowe
d.
I revelled in the Changi life of wide stretches of grass and trees and buildings
where taps ran and people who,
though on short commons, still retained an outlook that knew nothing of gaols. E
ven if a gaol outlook was to
come and the bliss could not last, it was still delight ful to experience it at
all. And each night after the day's
work, I would wander down to the Australian Concert Party's quarters, where, sit
ting on the wdod heap at its
rear, talk would range freely on all subjects until all hours with no fear of a
guard shouting "Currah" because
you should be in your cell.
But it was the day's work that caused the trouble. The command maintained, with
admirable lack of
understanding, that all men must be kept fully occupied all day. Thus, when I wa
s ordered to sweep a concrete
path a job which was obviously desirable since absolute cleanness meant health I
swept it quite happily and
very thor oughly. But when, having completed the task just before midday, an off
icer arrived and asked:
"Finished, Gunner?" and I replied, "Yes"; and he said, "All right, sweep it agai
n!" I became very aggressive.
Thereupon he explained that this was for the good of my moralehow we hated that
phrase and that if I
continued to be aggressive he would put me on a charge, so I at once became plac
id. But as soon as he turned
his back, I vanished down into the scrub in the gulley between the Convalescent
Depot and our quarters and
went to sleep under a tree. This I did each day as soon as I finished my allotte
d task and when, after a few
weeks, I was posted on to a Singapore working party, due to leave Changi almost
immediately, I was not very
sorry.
I went down to the Concert Party and said good-bye to Piddington and his friends
: then over to the hospital to
say good-bye to Hugh now looking less wan but still very ill: then on to a truck
which transported us back to
the realities of prisoner-of-war lifeto a native hutted camp set in the middle o
f a mud flat with lots of Japanese
guards. This swamp revelled in the euphemistic title of River Valley. It had bee
n built by the British to house
native refu gees during the war and had, very sensibly, been deserted by them as
early as possible and left to
the mosquitoes, the frogs and the bugs who now, as we entered, reigned supreme.
7 SINGAPORE INTERLUDE
River Valley Camp lay on either side of an especially foul little stream from wh
ich we were in the habit of
fishing frogs for the purpose of conducting frog races and gambling thereon. Thi
s gam bling was quickly
forbidden by the authorities which ban we ha bitually ignored, our three-dollar
monthly pay check having by
this time been rendered valueless by inflation.
Apart from the frogs and the foul little stream, there were rows upon rows of di
lapidated attap huts with two
tiers of bamboo decking running down each side of a mud passageway. On each of t
hese slept hundreds of
men, whilst in the bamboo supports and decks and the attap roofing there lurked
many billions of bugs all of
them with Anglophobia.
And as well as the huts and the bugs there was masses of mud which mud the Engli
sh troops on the far side of
the stream declared to be more villainous in their area, whilst we asserted that
it was worse in ours. Over the
whole joyful scene hung the cloud of de pression caused by evilly disposed guard
s Japs who bashed and Sikhs
who, given the smallest chance, would rape.
Our work lay in the docks of Singapore's Kepple Harbour in the go-downs. These g
o-downs had, in the weeks
just before Christmas 1941, been stacked with the food and gifts that Singapore
was to buy in the festive
season. The festive season, regrettably, had de teriorated into a war which we d
id not win. The food and gifts
were now being sorted, packed and reshipped by our conquerors.
Needless to say, a great deal of the material we handled "went off." Food especi
ally went where it did us most
good. The sheds were littered with punctured milk cans and disembowelled tins of
fish: the ill-fated gifts were
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
sold (to the accompaniment of the usual bitter wrangling) to the native populati
on*
Came the unprecedented day when in Go-down 2 we found a mixed cargo. For eight r
iotous hours, as we
worked under the justi fiably suspicious eyes of our guards, we ate chocolates a
nd cough jubes, drank bay
rum, cough mixture, cod-liver oil and essence of vanilla in equal and indiscrimi
nate quantities: applied hair
tonic to the hair, face cream to the face and iodex to almost everything; mixed
handfuls of sugar with handfuls
of herrings in tomato sauce and devoured the resulting mess and sold lipsticks b
y the dozen to the Chinese
outside the back door. It couldn't last, of course, but by the time we were caug
ht we had all of us stored vast
quantities of patent medicines, concentrated foods and culinary flavourings wher
e they could never be
retrieved. Though severely thrashed, we were happy. We were also some of us who
hid the money more
cunningly than others and, therefore, did not lose it in the searchquite rich. I
had gorged to the utmost and
smeared myself liberally with great quantities of oils and lotions. I reeked lik
e a chemist's shop. But I had
twenty dollars strapped with adhesive tape to my armpit and I had found a truck
going back to Changi and had
placed on it a packet of tinned food for Hugh. I felt well pleased. Next day we
found, to no one's surprise, that
we were working not in the food stores but in the go-downs that housed 500-pound
bombs instead.
To the accompaniment of the usual bellows of "Currah," TDamme, darnm^" "Speedo"
and "One man one,"
we lugged bombs from the go-down up the gangplank and down into the holds of shi
ps bound for the Pacific
islands. Though the 500-pound bombs were obviously beyond the powers of one man,
the Nips would not
compromise over the 250-pounders. One man one it was. And for day after day, any
thing up to sixteen hours a
day, we staggered under the weight of those bombs in their crude deal crates. Th
ey tore the skin and flesh on
one's shoulders and the bashings were incessant For the second time in my career
, I found myself thinking of
a most un savoury abode as "home," and towards the end of a day's violence I wou
ld long for the mud and the
bugs of River Valley.
River Valley was only a brief interlude in our prisoner life: it was not, howeve
r, a dull one. The I.J.A.
demanded "volunteers" to broadcast their propaganda to the Allies. Unanimously w
e refused. They
threatened: we still refused. They cajoled, offering us the dubious privilege of
a monthly visit to their
Army-issue geisha girls (rather battered-looking prewar models): we refused. The
matter was then dropped.
In an effort to soften us up, though, the guard commander came into our hut one
night and announced:
"Rockhampton, boom, boom, boom." This meant that Japan had bombed Rockhampton.
"Go on, eh, Nippon?" he was queried as a knot of men gathered round. "Rockhampto
n, eh?"
"Hei," agreed the guard commander.
"And Sydney?" asked someone else. "Sydney, boom, boom, boom?"
""Hei, Sydney, boom, boom, boom," agreed the Nip.
"Melbourne?"
TKei," said the Nip, "Melbourne, boom, boom, boom."
"Wagga?"
T3ei," confirmed the Nip. "Wagga, boom, boom, boom."
"Garbo?"
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
TSei," he stated. "Garbo, boom, boom, boom." It was obvious that there was no pl
ace and no person Nippon
had not bombed.
"Tokyo?" Harry asked, his smile wicked.
"Tokyo hei," said the guard, "boom, boom..." and then realized how he had been c
aught.
"Tokyo NET," he denied. "Boom, boom, boom NEE Tokyo," and swept out in high dudg
eon.
That same day, in the course of the pursuit of a particularly agile frog (with w
hich he hoped to win hundreds
of dollars in our frog races), one of our number allowed enthusiasm to outstrip
discretion and followed its
leaping attempts at escape some hundreds of yards outside the barbed wire which
surrounded our camp. He
was arrested by the guards, who announced their intention of shooting him out of
hand.
We could see him tied up to a post outside the guard hut. Night was falling. If
he was to be saved, swift action
had to be taken.
Every man in the camp at once thronged the parade ground opposite the guard hut
and indicated that if any
violence was offered the frog hunter they would tear the guards to pieces. The g
uard commander, therefore,
agreed for the first time to hear our commanding officer's version of the frog h
unter's story. And when he did
(surprised that it was not an escape attempt he had foiled), he promised that th
e captive would be released
unharmed.
The commanding officer then came over to our mass of men (about a thousand) and
told us that all was well a
verdict which was received with frantic enthusiasm as the crisis had been a real
one (one cannot murder
Japanese guards and get away with it). The officer, with a cheery smile, then sa
id, "All right, gentlemen, break
off," and, for the second time in our gaol-bird career, we were caught. We broke
off. And for the second time
we were abused roundly for our presumption in so elevating ourselves. But this t
ime we ignored the indignant
command to stand fast. We continued to break off, the Number One Gentleman leapi
ng up and down with
rage as the parade ground gradually emptied itself of the thousand men who, havi
ng gathered spontaneously
to save a comrade's life at whatever cost, now withdrew to their huts without th
e formality of a Dismiss.
Hard upon this episode came the year's best rumour. The Russians were in Greece!
For about six hours the
camp seethed with excite ment at this overnight advance from Stalingrad to Athen
s. Then the sad truth was
unearthed. It appeared that the Japanese proposed working us on extra shifts fro
m that day forward in their
attempts to victual their island campaigns. For that purpose, for the moment, th
e rations were increased. Sadly
we setded back to a war which was still largely defensive.
The remainder of our stay in the Valley consisted of bomb loading for the Japane
se and stealing for ourselves
highlighted by such in cidents as the sudden craze developed by Australian soldi
ers for tattoos (a craze catered
for, with complete lack of artistry but the usual regrettable permanency of all
tattoos, by one of our more
businesslike companions who at once bought ink and needles from the natives and
proceeded to desecrate
many a hitherto unblemished forearm).
As well as that, I remember reading Winnie the Pooh three times (to the great di
sgust at first of my friends).
When at last, how ever, they could stand my frequent bursts of kughter at the an
tics of Ee-ore and the poems
of Pooh no longer, they began furtively dipping into it themselves, and eventual
ly it went round both tiers of
our overcrowded and verminous hut Winnie the Pooh is a book which all adults, pa
rticularly those whose
lives have become diffi cult, should read.
I also remember the ritual of several men who daily collected one matchboxful of
bugs and carefully cast
them into the guard hut as they marched past and out to work. I remember the Iri
shman called Geraghty who,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
being responsible for guiding a Jap driver on a bull dozer, had quite deliberate
ly waved the Nipponese
gentleman on over a forty-foot drop and then persuaded the senior Jap engineer t
hat the accident had occurred
because the driver was drunk! Result one shattered bulldozer: one equally shatte
red driver. I remember that
one day some British Other Ranks were charged with a com pletely trivial breach
of regimental discipline and
to our universal astonishment sentenced to cells and only one meal a day by our
own officers. There being no
cells available, they were incarcerated in a filthy wooden shed. There being no
room in our lives for such
nonsense, we tore the shed down, released the prisoners and used the timber so g
ained for firewood.
Harry discussed the matter, as he lit a native cheroot purchased with the illega
l winnings of a frog race. He lit
it from the end of a long length of smouldering rope. Matches had vanished and t
he everlasting Search for a
Tight" had become quite a dominating factor in our lives, so that a hut which co
ntained its length of
slowburning rope was the object of a steady pilgrimage of smokers from all over
the camp.
These chuis" he said ("chuT is Japanese for "officer"), "ought to take a pull at
themselves." He exhaled a
cloud of smoke and looked quizzically at the cheroot, his mouth crooked. "Bloody
hor rible," he declared.
"I've smoked tea leaves and chopped-up cane and papaya leaves, but this is the m
ost bloody horrible of all.
Now where was I?" he asked.
"The chuis," he was reminded.
"That's right," he agreed, "the chuis. They ought to take a pull at themselves.
Someone's got to give orders and
they're the blokes that should give em. But if an order don't make things better
for all of us when you've done
it, then there's no point doing it because we ve got plenty to do for Nippon any
way." To indicate, however,
that there were no hard feelings, he offered his cheroot to the duty officer (wh
o had been in on the whole
debate) and said: "Have a drag." The duty officer had a drag, coughed in agony a
nd banded it promptly back.
"For Christ's sake," he said, "where'd you get that?"
"Bought it off a boong for fifty cents," Harry told him.
"Well, he saw you coming," was the officer's retort. Then he started coughing ag
ain so Harry and I thumped
his back for him. "How are the legs, Russ?^ I showed him my legs, which were ugl
y with the lime burns and
the year-old sores on my feet which wouldn't heal. He grunted sympathetically. B
y way of reciprocation, I
asked: "How's your gut?"
"Lousy," he assured me, "went twenty-eight times yesterday and well on the way t
o beating that today."
It was a sign of the times that man's main preoccupations in those days were the
inhalation into his lungs of
smoke, the filling of his stomach and the evacuation of his bowels.
The Coral Sea Battle was won, the Japanese endeavouring to cover up their defeat
by fantastic claims in the
Syonan Shimbun 1 claims which involved the sinking of more Allied vessels of war
in one clash than were
ever listed in all the copies of Jane's Fighting Ships. Perhaps because of the o
pen derision with which these
propaganda efforts were greeted by us they staged a sudden search for secret rad
ios. They found none
although one lay in the rice store, one in an open dust box in a hut casually ca
mouflaged with rubbish, and one
in the bottom half of an Army-issue water bottle.
This latter had more than once caused us heart failure as its Singapore had been
renamed Syonan-to: Shimbun
is simply a "newspaper." owner always wore it to work. That, of course, was the
logical thing to do, since we
all wore our water bottles to work.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Where our friend, we felt, went too far was in making a point of offering the gu
ard a drink out of it each day.
Though it held water in its top half, we couldn't help feeling that the bluff wa
s a little cold-blooded.
Nevertheless, it bore dividends. It was our practice, when we had emptied our wa
ter bottles of water, to fill
them with anything that we could steal. Thus, in the last days of our sojourn at
River Valley, we found
ourselves in a go-down where, as well as bombs, there were palm oil (for the man
ufacture of soap) and
bicycle parts. Accordingly, in between carrying bombs and evading the "Speedoes"
of our guards, we all filled
our bottles with oil, which we drank and (for good measure) popped in as many ba
ll bearings and other small
bicycle parts as possible these to be sold later to the Chinese.
Exhausted by his non-stop screaming, the guard suddenly found himself in need of
a drink. He accordingly,
and to our great horror, picked up the first water bottle he set eyes on and dra
nk. He drank three large gulps of
Singer machine oil and about eighteen inches of bicycle chain! When he had event
ually clawed the chain back
out of his gullet and frantically swabbed his tongue free of lubricant, he was e
xtremely displeased. As if it
were not enough that he himself had suffered considerable discomfort, the I.J.A.
faced with a fuel shortage
because of their inability to repair the wrecked oil wells of Borneo and the Dut
ch East Indies regarded
bicycles as war transport and theft of bicycle parts as sabotage.
Consequently, we were all lined up and our water bottles, one by one, emptied. A
s each was upturned and its
contents fell to the ground, its owner was punished. But when the guard came to
our friend with the wireless
in his bottle, he remembered the daily offer of a drink and said: "You O.K.," an
d merely patted him
affectionately on the shoulder which was silly of him because of that moment, as
well as a radio, the bottle
contained hundreds of connecting links for which the Chinese were prepared to pa
y a small fortune. Thus we
petty pilferers returned to camp covered in blood and disgrace, whilst the arch-
villain of us all marched
brightly back, arm in arm with his guard, singing Dinah, is there anyone and smo
king one of the I.JA's Kooah
cigarettes!
A few weeks later we returned to Changi returned to celebrate our first Christma
s in captivity and almost a
year in which for most of us no word from us to home or from home to us had been
heard.
8 BORE-HOLES
Changi was much the same. Officers still looked gorgeous and wore pips on their
bosoms so that no one
might mistake them for any thing else. Orders of the day were promulgated (as th
e hideous word was) with
abandon and were usualy superfluous. The allembracing cover-up for multidinous s
ins was that they were
"good for morale," Japanese guards were seldom seen. All the work that was requi
red of the men in camp was
what was necessary to keep the area spotlessly dean, the gardens growing and the
kitchen fires burning.
The Australian Concert Party had developed from a rather pol ished purveyor of v
audeville corn into a group
who already gave signs of becoming the backbone of Changi entertainment which en
tertainment was to be a
key factor in maintaining our high morale in the ensuing years and for the prese
rvation of which our command
(to whom I have not so far been excessively kind) must be awarded the fullest po
ssible praise. Whatever
demands the Japanese made for workers, the Concert Party was always preserved in
tact. No bet ter investment
than this was ever made on our behalf. There are few men who were captured on Si
ngapore in 1942 and who
survived till 1945 who do not now remember, and will not always remember, the sk
ill of John Wood, the
songs (topical and tuneful) of Slim de Grey and Ray Tullipan, the harmony of Geo
ghegan and Woods and that
plaintive cry of our most melancholy comic: *TTouTl never get off the island." N
o matter how black the news
nor how depressing the atmosphere, Harry Smith, universally known as Happy Harry
, had only to turn his
long face full at the audience and wail the apparent truism, "YouTl never get of
f the island," for com plete
hilarity to be restored.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The Concert Party also flourished because it commanded the enthusiastic support
of a Japanese interpreter
called Terai. Terai, peacetime professor of English in a Nipponese university, w
as deemed by almost everyone
to be pro-British. He was young, slim, had a pleasant face and was always glad t
o find in Singapore such
improbable commodities as strings for a violin, or women's gowns, or make-up mat
erials or whatever it was
that the perform ers needed. All he asked in return was a little conversation pr
efer ably not about the war,
which he hated.
Meanwhile, Changes irrepressible energy the energy of ten thou sand Britons coop
ed up without any contact
with the outside world burst out in a thousand different directions. There were
courses on every subject and
every language: there were societies to discuss every hobby and every sport: the
re were little theatres playing
everything from Shakespeare to Journeys End: there were concerts of classical mu
sic and concert parties
which weren't classical at all. On my first night back in Changi I could have go
ne to lectures on skiing,
contract law, Communism or tiger hunting: I could have gone to any one of four p
lays or two musical shows:
I could have heard Dennis East peacetime violinist under Sir Thomas Beecham give
a recital. As it was, I
went down to the Australian Concert Party, sat on the woodpile and talked with K
ddington and his friends
about Australian beer and beaches and the possible truth of the prevailing rumou
r (better known in those days
as a "bore hole" 1 ) that all P.O.W,'s were to be repatriated by the Japanese in
exchange for a bag of rice per
man. Though these bore-holes make extraordinary reading now, it must be realized
that they formed a strong
part of the fabric of our lives and that, whilst to most of us they were merely
topics for pleasant speculation,
they were to others especially those who invented them subjects about which one
must be deadly serious. The
most incorrigible bore-holer in the Australian forces was in the habit of bettin
g his paybook on the veracity of
his outrageous statements and it is estimated that had all his challengers insis
ted, at the end of the war, upon
^ore-holes were latrines. They were dug to a depth of forty feet as many as eigh
t side by side. There being no
privacy there (or, indeed, anywhere eise), one made the most of them and talked
amicably with one's fellow
visitors. Visits to bore-holes being one of the things that happened most freque
ntly to one each day, they
naturally became the occasion for the distribution of every fantastic rumour the
camp ever heard, dreamed or
invented.
these debts being paid lie would have been required to produce somewhere in the
nature of a quarter of a
million pounds.
In the company of this strange woodpile group, I was to spend a happy few months
. They were delightful.
Piddington with his passionwhich I sharedfor travel. John Wood, successful Austr
alian actor of the English
stage and films, who was now a signalman but was, nevertheless, the greatest sou
rce of stage anecdotes and
comic songs that Changi knew. Keith Stevens, a bawdy comic and peace time advert
ising salesman. Ernie
Ward, who never said anything much but always knew all the news because he kept
a radio in his trumpet.
Lesley Greener, archaeologist, Arctic fisherman, linesman, artist, traveller, wr
iter. And from the English lines,
Harry Witherford, who knew about the stars and production engineering and talked
calmly of such unheard-of
nonsense as turbo-jet engines: and Mike Cooper, who was a Gurkha officer and gen
tleman rider. A mixed
bag, mixed as to rank, interests and conversational ability, reduced to the one
common denominator of a
woodpile in the pleas ant warmth of Singapore's evening.
Christmas Day came and we ate enormous meals of rice having saved a small portio
n of our ration every day
for weeks past. This rice was served as rice au naturel and as rice camouflaged
in which form it was known to
us as a "doover." We also distributed rather pathetic attempts at Christmas card
s and such quaint presents as
one banana or a little grated-up coconut. The Pommies sang their carols and the
entire camp sent toys made of
rubber wood to the English children interned with their parents in the gaol a mi
le down the road. In spite of
the Japanese the spirit of Christmas was never stronger.
Apart from the pleasant company and the pleasant surroundings and the pinpricks
of incessant regimentation,
the two most predominant recollections of that time are the sick parades and the
fear of being "sent away."
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Sick parades had become a daily factor in almost every man's life especially the
Other Ranks, who, being paid
considerably less than the officers, were unable to combat their ailments with p
urchases of black market
tinned food. The universal complaint was lack of vitamins. The universal symptom
s a raw scrotum, a raw
tongue and sores which would not heal.
Until one has lived with the discomfort of a raw scrotum, the agony of a raw ton
gue and the revulsion against
one's own body that a pair of leprous-looking legs creates, one cannot fully app
reciate the significance of
these conditions. Perhaps it gives some indication of their impact upon the aver
age man's mind that, though he
knew that no treatment did him any goodthere being no adequate treatment he stil
l lined up each day on the
sick parade.
From their end, the doctors worked ceaselessly. They created a recipe for making
yeast (unfortunately
defeated because it could not keep up with the demand upon it and because its di
stribution managed,
unobserved by the administration whose whole attention was absorbed at that time
with the twin problems of
saluting and morale to slip into the hands of racketeers). They invented a machi
ne which extracted a black
juice from lalang grass (of which Malaya has a superabundance) and they persuade
d us by their own example
to drink this juice, though its taste was surpassingly vile.
They attempted endless variations and permutations of the avail able drugs, whic
h were sulphur, eusol,
mercurochrome and acriflavine. They circumcised practically every man who was no
t already circumcised.
They never ceased improvising and pondering.
They urged us, with good humour and resignation, to do as little as possible eac
h day because the calorific
content of our full ration was they hac} discovered only sufficient to enable on
e to breathe. If one moved or
worked then, if prewar medical standards were to be believed, we must all surely
die.
This interesting piece of information we accepted as dispassionately as we accep
ted fatigues to kill flies, and
weevils in our rice, and sleeping on floors, and never seeing any women. We mere
ly suggested that it might
be as well if they the medical punditscontacted first our own authorities (less
they kill us all off with
compulsory saluting) and then the Japanese, who appeared to have totaly differen
t ideas about calories and
plans as to how they were to be consumed.
But even the doctors had their blunderers two in particular come to mind. The fi
rst called a full parade of the
men who were unfortunate enough to be on his "panel" and addressed them. He told
them that they were
suffering from pellagra. Pellagra, he pointed out, advanced in three stages. Fir
st, skin diseases from which, as
he rightly declared, we all already suffered. Second, a raw tongue also already
upon us. Third, madness! This,
he asserted confidently, was (a) coming, and (fo) incurable. He looked at the pa
rade gravely, revelling in his
drama. Regrettably, the Britisher has little time for drama and his grave warnin
g was greeted with prolonged
and uncontrollable laughter.
The other M.O. who distinguished himself was the one who called a similar parade
and threatened it with
universal, perpetual and imminent sterility if it did not at once and regularly
thenceforth eat plenty of hibiscus
leaves! For months, though no one took bin) too seriously for he was known as a
doctor who would make a
good plumber there was not a hibiscus bush in Changi to be seen upon which sprou
ted even the smallest shoot
of green.
Fear of being sent away on a working party was also a very real psychological fa
ctor in those times. It sprang
from the strange un willingness we all experienced to move anywhere once we had
settled, and it was
especially strong in those who, so far, had never worked outside Changi that is,
had never worked for the
Japanese. It resulted in endless intrigue and string pulling and there were plen
ty of strings to pull which was
probably more exhausting than the work it was designed to avoid. That it was a f
ear for which there was
considerable basis, however, is not to be doubted. One has only to look at the a
nnihilation which befell the
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
party sent to Borneo, the drowning of shiploads of men en route for Japan, the d
ecimation of the railroad
workers in Thailand and Burma, to realize that, intui tive though the fear was,
it was a most sensible one.
So, to the accompaniment of endless sick parades, rumours, appre hension about t
he possibility of one's being
sent to the Kra Isthmus to dig a canal across it and the news that abroad the Ge
rmans in Africa and Russia
were now steadily being pushed back, the first months of 1943 passed.
Possibly it was the B.B.C. news (now for the first time encouraging since the wa
r began) which inspired the
most fantastic of all Changf's episodes. The Australian 30th Battalion, in the m
iddle of a prison camp, under
the very nose of an enemy notorious for his shortness of temper, was ordered to
start drilling again. This it did
on the Selarang Barrack Square, marching to and fro armed with dummy rifles. As
if this were not enough,
our command instituted courses in unarmed combat and bayonet attack. None of thi
s was done with particular
discretion and it seemed inevitable that Nip pon, silly as he could be at times,
would soon wake up to what
was being done especially since we were cursed, then and in most camps at most t
imes, with the presence of
Indonesian troops who, wretched as Allies, as our fellow prisoners were the Japa
nese best source of inside
information as to all our activities.
In any event, the phony captivity ended with a sudden bang when a terrific searc
h was staged for radios,
suspected operators were whipped off to Outrim Road Gaol (where they endured gha
stly conditions), the
national anthem was banned and the camp was warned that parties were to be made
ready to leave Singapore
for Thailand. Those who remained, it was rumoured (correctly), were to build an
aerodrome below Changi
where now there was only a swamp and two hills.
The Thailand parties, the Nips said, were to go to comfortable camps with plenty
of rations. Tliey pointed out
tliat Thailand un like Malaya, which imports half the rice it eats was self-supp
orting. They urged that sick men
be included in the party lists so that they might convalesce. They suggested swe
etly that band instrumentseven
a piano might help to while away the leisure hours of those who were transplante
d.
Thus, midst a welter of contradictory reports, bribery, corruption, faked sickne
ss and genuine attempts to
transfer hospital cases to better conditions, the first party known as F Force l
eft Changi. It left with a large
proportion of men who came direct from their beds in hospital, plus the piano, p
lus all sorts of paraphernalia
suitable for a convalescent camp under a civilized foe.
A short time later a second party was conscripted with Terai as its interpreter.
Hugh was put on its list, though
still a bed case in the hospital. I, after much heart-searching (for I felt that
all was not well with this Thailand
venture), decided that I should go with him. I therefore severed all the strings
which were being pulled so
industriously on my behalf and, on the eve of H Force's depar ture, asked that m
y name be added to its
numbers.
Next day we were crammed, thirty men and all our possessions (as well as our sha
re of the force's cooking
utensils, medical panniers, agricultural implements and guards), into each truck
. As the train chugged
erratically over the causeway, back towards K.L., I found myself thinking that a
ll this was most inauspicious.
My thoughts were interrupted by a thunderous shouting, all along the train, from
British and Australian
throats alike, of Harry Smith's now immortal cry: "You'll never get off the isla
nd."
Thirty seconds later Singapore lay behind us and we steamed into Johore. We were
to know no further peace
of mind or body until, a year later, the fortunate survivors would cross that ca
use way again and get back onto
the island.
3 "BRING YOUR PIANO"
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The journey to Thailand was unpleasant. It took five days and our cattle trucks
all seemed to be equipped with
innumerable protuber ances which stuck into one's back as one squatted (there wa
s not room to sit), or into
one's head as one crouched under a roof which was too low to allow standing. By
day the steel carriages
scorched with the heat of the sun: by night they were like iceboxes. Perhaps onc
e a day men were allowed out
of the trucks to stretch their legs and attend to the various demands of nature.
Nature, unfortunately, did not
understand this arrangement and made her demands much more frequently, which in
crowded trucks on a
jolting train re quired all our patience and tolerance of one another.
Water was the main difficulty. One could overlook the absence of food, but in th
at intense heat thirst became
an obsession. We soon learnt to steal out whenever the train stopped and fill up
one of the dixies from the
engine greasy water, but boiled, so consum able. Usually the two men who went on
this expedition were
caught and thrashed, but the expeditions, being necessary, continued.
At one such stop Terai, the interpreter, came down to our truck. I was reading.
"What are you reading, Mr. Braddon?" he asked quietly.
"George Bernard Shaw," I told him.
"Like it?* he queried.
"Some of it," I said. At that he launched into a long dissertation on St. Joan w
hich was only terminated when
the two men with the dixie were dragged back by three guards and savagely punche
d for
187 leaving the truck. Terai watched the bashing with evident distress.
"This is very unpleasant," he said, "I am sorry,'
"We have to get water," I explained.
"Why not some other way?" he demanded. "Why not ask?"
I laughed at that. His eyes flickering up at mine and then down again, Terai rep
eated: "This is very
unpleasant," and left.
We crossed the Thailand border and found Thailand no different from Malaya excep
t that its natives were
rather more energetic especially in their thieving, at which they were most adep
t. And eventually the train
ground to a halt and we were ordered out, to the accompaniment of the usual endl
ess bellowing, onto a rather
dreary-looking platform.
Anxiously I took stock of my possessions. One water bottle, one mess tin, one sp
oon, toothbrush and razor;
the complete works of G.B.S., Mein Kampf and an Oxford Book of English Verse, gi
ven to me just before our
departure by Harry Witherford, the British officer who knew about the stars and
turbo-jets. Having made cer
tain that they were all there, I bundled them into the rice bag I used as a have
rsack and, with the rest of the
party, started off down a filthy dust track towards the promised convalescent ca
mp.
I wondered how Hugh was. Ironically enough, I hadn't seen him since we got on th
e train at Singapore, where
the authorities had suddenly been smitten with the bright idea that it would be
more efficient if the whole
force fell in in alphabetical groups. Conse quently, men found themselves separa
ted from their inseparable
friends and one of the few comforts of our lives was removed for a five-day jour
ney and the ensuing march.
The dirt road led through a Thai town called Bam Pong. There our presence as we
marched roused interest
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
only in the native traders, who led by their yellow-robed, predatory, Buddhist p
riests clamoured to buy
anything we possessed. It was a sign of the times that the participants of Nippo
n's Greater East Asia
Prosperity Scheme were now prepared to buy anything rather than keep the Jap pap
er money in their pockets
where it became steadily more worthless every minute. Though the Thais allegedly
remained inde pendent,
their economy was so hamstrung by the Japanese Occupation that in that country,
as everywhere else in the
Far East, blackmarketing with prisoners of war was one of the main and most vigo
rous industries. As a nation
we found the Thais excessively dishonest and thieving. We reciprocated wholehear
tedly.
The Convalescent Camp turned out to be native huts made of attap, mud-floored, l
ittered with excrement,
seething with flies, and in that condition of unspeakable filth which only Asiat
ics can attain. It was bad
enough for those of us who were fit, but for the men who had been uprooted from
Changfs hospital it was like
a death sentence. The five-day train trip had not improved their condition. The
sour, fermented rice and the
greasy water of those days had brought on fresh bouts of dysentery to almost all
of them. They looked drawn
and one felt fearful for them.
Without warning, the Japs swept down on the camp and searched it searched it for
everything from weapons
to wireless sets. Though they found nothing it was only at the expense of our du
mping all grenades, bayonets,
daggers and machine-gun parts (of which there were more than a few) down the cam
p well. The radio, being
se creted in an accordion which the gentleman who owned it played gaily and with
no tune at all throughout
the search, was not dis covered.
The Japanese, through Terai, then ordered us to fill our water bottles and fall
in for a night march.
"How far?" we asked.
"Twenty miles," was the answer.
All that night we marched with our respective sacks and packs on our backs; the
qualis and dixies and axes
and other tools slung on poles and carried by pairs of men in turn; the sick, as
they col lapsed, being supported
by whomever was nearest. The Japs at the head of the column, marching with only
a rifle, set a brisk pace
which they refused to ease: and the Japs at the rear used a liberal rifle butt t
o ensure that this ace was
maintained. I soon found myself slipping into my prison habit of counting. Each
step I counted. Thousand
after thousand even though I determined dozens of times to stop until I nearly w
ent mad. The sun was
scorching down again before we reached the next camp high on the water-eroded ba
nks of a swift-running
river.
Without any hesitation, and in spite of the bellows of our guards, we squatted o
n our heels and glissaded down
the almost sheer forty-foot clay bank of the river and into the coolness of wate
r. For a few moments the cares
of our coolie existence fell from us. The sensual pleasure of swimming on a hot
day in rushing water quickly
washes away memories of such nastiness as the existence of the Japanese. But the
Japanese are not a race who
will happily allow their existence to be forgotten. Shots from the bank above in
dicated that they were not
pleased. And when we looked up we saw why. In the torrent of the river we had al
l been washed some three
or four hundred yards downstream and were still moving steadily on. Hurriedly we
fought our way to the
bank. There a further problem presented itself. We had no means of drying oursel
ves: the banks were almost
sheer clay: our wet feet and limbs turned their prac tically vertical face to gr
ease and we were completely
unable to make the ascent. One would get a few feet up and then hurtle back ward
s into the river again. No
good the guards screaming (which they did with gusto), we just had to wait at th
e bottom until we were dry.
When we did at last clamber up to the top, the guards gave practickl demonstrati
on of their extreme
displeasure.
The day was spent bartering briskly with the Thais to obtain as much food as pos
sible to sustain us over the
next night's march, which we had now been told we were to undertake. Anxious abo
ut Hugh, I searched him
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
out and found him in the hands of one Harry Peck, Harry, as a thirteen-year-old
Cockney lad, had decided that
he would emigrate to Australia. For months he pestered his family to sign the ne
cessary papers. For months
they boxed his ears and refused. But Harry was persistent and at last they agree
d. Harry was on his way.
He landed in Sydney dressed in the height of Cockney fashion, complete with chec
k suit and heavy cap. This
garb stunned the locals especially the Reception Committee who thrust him on a c
ountry-bound train as
quickly as possible, much to the amazement of the other passengers.
At Parkes in New South Wales, Harry, in checks and cap, got off the train to mee
t his new employerin a khaki
shirt, wide-brimmed hat, Army boots and dungaree pants. They gazed at one anothe
r in mutual astonishment.
Then the farmer said: "Get in," so Harry hopped aboard the buggy and they jogged
out to the farm.
There Harry lived in a galvanized iron hut with primitive furni ture. Lived quit
e alone except for the company
of a large carpet snake, which slept in the rafters over his head eating mice. H
e was terrified of this snake.
He learned to plough a straight furrow, to ring-bark a tree, to sink fence posts
, to stretch barbed wire. He knew
no one except the carpet snake and, as soon as he had saved a little money, he l
eft the farm and farming and
the carpet snake for good and went into the nearby town.
There, with his savings, he bought a small share in a vegetable shop. Soon he ha
d enough to buy out his
partner. Then he bought another shop, and became a Mason, and flourished. When w
ar broke out Harry was
earning two thousand pounds a year and had great plans for the future. But he wa
s still the same Cockney as
had first landed in Australia simple, stubborn, generous to a fault and the war
left him in no two minds as to
what he should do. He gave up all his plans and volunteered for the A.I.F. A yea
r later he was handed over to
the Japanese by the capitulation of Singapore. Lit tle more than another twelve
months found him on the
banks of a river in Thailand looking after Hugh.
With his penchant for trade, Harry had bought some coffee and sugar from the Tha
is and he and Hugh were
now doing a brisk business selling the brew at ten cents a cupful to thirsty mar
chers. Harry's wide grin on his
sweating rugged face was cheering in those dismal surroundings. His sparse, sand
y hair stood up on end and
was full of cinders and ash from his fire.
"No wonder they call you a nation of shopkeepers," I observed. "How are you doin
g?"
"Fine," said Harry. Tine have a cuppa coffee."
"How much?" I demanded cautiously. Harry looked offended, and, as Hugh approache
d, said: "Give the
gentleman a leggi cuppa coffee, Hughie." Hugh grinned and doled it out into my m
ess tin and asked what sort
of a trip the A's to D*s had had. I said not too bad and enquired about the M's
to Fs at which Harry looked up
from the fire, which he was blowing lustily, his face scarlet, and answered: "Bl
oody atrocious."
Then the whistle blew for a parade and I had to leave. "See you next stop," I sa
id to Hugh and he grinned
again, but looked much too frail to be doing another twenty-mile march that nigh
t.
"I'll look after the kid," Harry promised.
"Good on you," I thanked him. "See you kter, Harry. Bye-bye, Hugh, thanks for th
e coffee," and I made my
way back to where my section was already falling in.
To my enquiries as to what it was all about, I was told that there was another s
earch on. Almost immediately
Terai appeared with some guards and our few possessions were once again ransacke
d. Terai flicked his way,
with academic interest, through my book of Shaw.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
TDo you like Pygmalion? 9 he asked. I said I did.
"And this book of verse," he continued, flicking over the pages of the Oxford ed
ition which Witherford had
given me. I said I liked that too.
"I am sorry," said Terai, "But you had better leave these here with me."
"You mean you're confiscating them," I said. Terai shrugged apologetic shoulders
. I asked what about Mein
Kampf. Mr. Terai indicated that Nippon would not take it amiss if I read Mein Ka
mpf. But Shaw and the
Oxford book of verse again that apologetic shrug.
Ten minutes later the march started again and I slung my bag across my shoulders
a bag about seven pounds
lighter now that the complete wisdom of Shaw and Oxford's distillation of Englis
h verse had been removed
from it and strode off with the rest, realizing irritably that thenceforth my me
ntal companion for however long
we remained in Thailand was to be none other than Adolf Hitler.
The second night's march saw further casualties from exhaustion and the Nips bad
temper and when, in the
morning, we reached a flat, parched piece of scrub, at which the guard called a
halt, we just dropped where we
stood and slept. After a few hours the sun beat down so fiercely that everyone w
as compelled to crawl under
the spiky bushes that grew dotted around the clearing stunted and filthy with th
e rubbish of previous native
forces though they were and we slept again.
When we woke we found that the Thais had been most active and stolen everything
that was not closely
guarded* This included much of our officers kit (about which we were not unduly
upset since officers trunks
tend to become heavy on a twenty-mile march) and any other movables which had at
tracted the Thais roving
eye. The place, we were told, was called Kanchinaburi, which was pro nounced Kam
buri. It was an old walled
city (and, indeed, now that we looked, we could see the city with ancient walls
a mile or two away on our
right) and was the last spot of civilization before the jungle belt that makes T
hailand such a hellhole of fever
and Nature at her most savage.
We asked about previous parties, F Force, for example. The Thais pointed, grinni
ng amiably, straight into the
heart of the jungle and mountains. So at last we knew for certain. The Convalesc
ent Camp was a complete
fiction. All the men in Thailand were to be used on the long-rumoured constructi
on of a railway connecting
Bangkok with Rangoon. Japanese losses at sea round the Malacca Straits and the I
ndian Ocean had been so
enormous of late that they now pro posed a land line of supply to their forces i
n Burma instead. We were to
build that land line. Remembering that the British, who first surveyed the route
, had abandoned the prospect
as impossible, because of the cost to human life involved in those fever- and pl
ague-stricken mountains, it was
difficult not to feel a little sick at heart.
The Japanese gave us a cursory medical examination and a test for dysentery (a c
rude affair carried out with a
glass rod and de signed rather to humiliate than diagnosecertainly we never once
heard any results of these
tests). Then they vaccinated each man by slashing his arm with a lancet and spla
shing serum onto the cut.
Finally they injected a few ac,'s of something which they declared was anti-chol
era serum cheerful thought
into one's arm. Then, without more ado, amid torrential rain, we set out on the
march. In a few minutes we left
the road and puddled our way into the jungle. For the first time in my life I he
ard a British column start off on
a long march without the cheerful sounds of singing. There were no marching song
s that night nor for any of
the rest of the seven nights of the ordeal. Indeed, there was nothing to sing ab
outl
Those hundred or so miles through the jungle are very confused now. They were re
petitions of vicious
bashings from guards to those who fell, of the plundering by Thais of stragglers
, of slogging along through
knee-deep mud in blinding rain and inky darkness, of counting either consciously
or subconsciously until my
mind be came frenzied with the interminable progression of figures. And each mor
ning we would come to a
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
staging camp, each successive camp more primitive and foul than the last attap s
helters which leaked and
whose mud floors were littered with filth of every kind and here and there a dea
d native.
There were highlights, of course. The way when any man fell his comrades, howeve
r exhausted themselves, at
once picked him up and carried him until his strength returned sufficiently to e
nable him to carry on alone.
The way men accepted their share of the impedimenta and carried it for their all
otted time and then passed it
on, with never a complaint or a thought of cheating on their shift throughout th
e whole march,
Above all, there was the extraordinary courage and gentleness and the incredible
endurance of the medical
officer, Major Kevin Fagan. Not only did he treat any man needing treatment to t
he best of his ability; he also
carried men who fell; he carried the kit of men in danger of falling, and he mar
ched up and down the whole
length of the column throughout its entire progress. If we marched one hundred m
iles through the jungle,
Kevin Fagan marched two hundred And when, at the end of our night's trip, we col
lapsed and slept, he was
there to clean blisters, set broken bones and render first aid. And all of it he
did with the courtesy of a society
specialist who is being richly paid for his attention and the ready humour of a
man who is not tired at all. With
Padre Duckworth of Kuala Lumpur, he is the most inspiring man I have ever met So
me twenty thousand
British and Australian troops share my view.
"That man," observed a complete moron called Rocky Ned, who normally appreciated
nothing, "is a bloody
saint. * When a person ality impresses itself upon the mentality of Rocky Ned, a
nd when an Australian is so
far overcome as to call anyone a "saint," then, indeed, you are in the presence
of a great man.
Like all worth-while saints, however, Major Fagan possessed a goodly streak of e
arthy realism. On our first
night in the jungle a nuggety little man with close-cropped hair and a cauliflow
er ear suddenly dropped
moaning in front of me. My companion at that time was a lad called Roy Death. An
xiously we surveyed the
body at our feet and asked it what was wrong.
It's me legs, 9 * gasped the fallen man, "they won't move." By this time the end
of the column had passed us
and a guard was already waving his rifle round in a most disagreeable manner,
"Is it a cramp, Smokey?" asked Roy.
"No, it's me legs," said Smokey again, "they won't move," Roy looked at me and s
aid: "Jesus, well have to
carry him," I am not a charitable person and Smokey was one of the men on the fo
rce whom I liked least.
Even I, however, realized that Smokey could not be left to the tender mercies of
our guards and the Thais, so
we divided his gear between us and then picked him up and for two hours we carri
ed him, his paralyzed legs
dragging in the slush between us. Finally we managed to catch up the tail of our
column and in a few
moments the ubiquitous Fagan appeared alongside us. With a swift glance at the t
hree of us, he said: "All
right, sonny," to Roy, "I'll take your place," For this I was grateful. Roy had
dysentery and carrying Smokey
had been difficult for him. Fagan slipped Smokey's arm over his shoulder and the
n said, as we jogged along,
Smokey's feet still dragging stiffly through the mud: "Now, laddy, what's the tr
ouble?"
"Me legs," said Smokey piteously, "they won't move."
Quickly Fagan laid him down and looked at him. Then he crossed to me and said: "
Kick him in the seat of the
pants. Hard," he added. I thought it very sad that our best officer should have
to go mad at this juncture and
looked at him in dismay. "Go on," urged Fagan, "boot him." Mad as a March hare,
I thought, and did nothing.
Impatiently Fagan strode over to the prostrate Smofcey and applied a vigorous bo
ot to his paralyzed posterior.
With a howl of pain, all symptoms of paralysis vanished. Smokey leapt to his fee
t and fled. "Playing possum,"
Fagan explained. Roy Death looked rueful. "Guess that's the easiest couple of ho
urs march he's ever had," he
said.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
At the next halt we dumped his gear and waited hopefully for Smokey to come and
collect it. We had words
which we wished to say to Smokey. But Smokey was not so silly as that. He remain
ed hidden in the mass of
men, somewhere at the head of the column, and when we started off again he still
hadn't claimed his gear. We
decided that if the Thais got it it really didn't matter and rejoined our squad,
leaving his possessions in a small
pile at the side of the quagmire which was our track.
On the night of our march to Tarsao probably the foulest of all the staging camp
sit rained with increased fury
and our casualties became serious. Early in the piece one of our number collapse
d and could not be revived.
We collected a stretcher and took it in turns to carry him, one man on each hand
le of the stretcher, This meant
roughly a quarter of an hour's carrying and a half hour's rest throughout the ni
ght.
Just before dawn our leading guard took the wrong fork in the jungle track and w
e covered about four miles
(twelve thousand exhausted paces) which had then to be retraced. I have seldom s
een such desperation as
when the order came to go back on our tracks to that fork.
It was dawn when we reached it. Roy, myself and two others were carrying the str
etcher. Just before our time
ran out we sighted the squalid huts and bamboo compound fences of Tarsao. We de
cided to finish the journey
with the stretcher. About ten minutes kter we laid it down in one of the huts an
d called a doctor over. He
unwrapped the patient out of the gas cape in which we had rolled him to save him
from the rain and looked at
his face. A few deft prods at eyelids and pulse and he glanced up. "Dead," he pr
o nounced, "been dead for
hours."
I was filled with fury at this man who was selfish enough to allow us to carry h
im for twelve miles and be
dead all the time. Roy laughed. The other two looked at one another and demanded
of each other: Wouldn't
it?" The M.O. glanced up sharply and brought us back to our senses.
"Take him over to the mortuary," he instructed, "they'll fix him up over there."

"Mortuary?" Roy queried. "What the hell have you got a mortuary for?"
"Because," replied the M.O. grimly, "we can't leave bodies lying round the place
and there's no one to bury
them till the working parties come back each night." Silently we carried our bur
den to a small ramshackle
shed and laid it among the five other bodies which, wrapped in hessian sacking,
awaited the return that night
of the working parties.
"Mortuary," muttered Roy despondently as we left it.
Tarsao had a river and, to get rid of the mud of the march and the sweat of our
exertions and the stench of
corpses, we made our way down to it. On its banlcs Thais did a brisk trade buyin
g the clothes men stripped off
to go swimming. Already starvation had become sufficiently real to make food inf
initely more important than
clothing.
We dived into the brown water and, sighting Hugh in midstream, I swam over to hi
m. Revived by the water
and in his element in it, for he swam like a fish, he looked surprisingly fit.
"How are you doing?" I asked.
"Fine," he replied.
"Where's Harry?"
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Making coffee," he said, and we laughed. I took a mouthful of water, spat it at
him in the friendliest manner
possible and swam slowly back to my clothes (now receiving unhealthy attention f
rom a nearby squatting
Thai). Hugh followed me in, backstroking leisurely. We sat on a rock to dry off.
Hugh's emaciated legs and
blis tered feet I pretended not to notice; and about my own revolting extremitie
s he tactfully said nothing.
Hugh dressed and picked up a four-gallon petrol can.
"What's that for?" I asked him.
"Water for Harry's coffee," he told me, "he's boiling a brew back at the camp."
It was half a mile uphill back
to the camp, so I said I'd give him a hand, and a few minutes later we set off t
ogether.
Halfway up the hill a rather harassed-looking lieutenant passed us and glanced a
t the water in the tin.
"Make sure you boil that before you drink it," he said, "that river's full of ch
olera." I remembered the mouthful
of water I had spat at Hugh, the mouthful practically every man in the party had
spat at someone or other in
their pleasure at having sufficient liquid avail able to be able to afford the e
xtravagance of spitting it. We
finished our journey back in silence, Hugh and I no use talking about it, but we
were both thinking the same
thing.
Our party filled in what was left of the day in a rather sombre silence. The off
icer who had passed Hugh and
me with our can of water had, it seemed, gone down to the river and theretoo lat
eexhorted everyone to keep
their heads well clear of the cholerainfested water. The effort of not thinking
about this and of not talking
about it flung the entire party into a restless gloom.
We were not closely guarded. In fact, we were hardly guarded at all. It was not
necessary there was nowhere
to go. The country side for hundreds of miles around was rugged jungle, uninhabi
ted, fever-ridden, devoid of
food. To flee from any of our stopping places, or even from the march itself, wa
s simply to die alone in the
jungle.
Accordingly, we were left in peace until, late in the afternoon, a Japanese doct
or decided that he would like to
examine our feet The party lined up, to the accompaniment of much mutinous com m
ent, and filed past,
displaying its feet for the edification o Nippon. To our dismay, he treated ever
y blister by cutting off the entire
swollen surface with a lancet (which got steadily filthier as the examination pr
oceeded) and then pouring
iodine onto the resulting raw surface. The operation was both bloody and painful
and did more to infect and
cripple than anything else we had so far experienced.
When the party set out that night, climbing steeply up a raindrenched mountain,
the gait of even our most
sprightly members could only be described as a hobble.
Because this was the last night of the march, and an especially long leg, the gu
ards were more than ever noisy
and violent. In the rain it was impossible to discern any track, so one merely f
ollowed faithfully in the
footsteps of the man immediately in front. If he fell, you fell: if you fell, a
hundred men behind you, one after
the other, fell. The best that could be done was to pass warnings. Thus, if a ma
n hit his head on a bough, he
would halt and, to the man following, say: "Duck: timber! * And all down the lin
e, hundreds of times, the
phrase would be repeated: "Duck: timber...," "Duck: timber...," "Duck: timber...
,* and each man would duck
his head to save it from the blow of a bough he could not see and, turning round
, repeat: "Duck: timber!"
Apart from mud and its splashing, the darkness, the sounds of the guards voices
screaming "Speedo," "More
Speedo," and the occasional bashings, the march had little that can adequately b
e described. Altogether it was
a miserable affair. Being too wet for too long, and walking too far too quickly,
is never enjoyable. The jungle,
though invisible, made its presence felt with vines that tripped and bamboo spik
es that pierced, but most of all
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
by a faint all-pervading stink of leaf mould, bugs in the bark of giant trees, f
ungus and stagnant water. No
place that smelt like that could be meant by God to be inhabited by man.
But if the jungle lay heavily round us, shrouded in murky gloom and vapours, the
character of the marchers
themselves from Fagan downwards shone out brilliantly through all their dark pro
gress.
In a hundred ways the carefulness of those men for one another and their willing
ness to lend a hand to
whomever needed it im pressed one. Whilst I was filled with peevish anger at the
out rageous blows of rocks,
logs, trees and rifle butts, they plodded stolidly on, punctuating their muddy p
lunging with remarks like:
"Stump on the left...": "Are you all right, mate?": You hor rible little bastard
" (this to the guards, who
thoroughly deserved it)... and occasional fulsome oaths of such richness and vig
our that, peevish or not, one
found oneself laughing.
But it was in the watery light of that next dawn that all laughter was killed fo
r good in Thailand. A handful of
grey men working on a Japanese truck ( which had been manhandled the hundreds of
miles thus far and was
now inextricably stuck in the mud) turned out to be members of the force, F Forc
e, which preceded us. They
were emaciated, seemed indifferent to everything, and their faces were stamped w
ith a misery that was too
awful to look at Their eyes, inches deep in the sockets, looked mad. F Force, th
ey told us, had been smitten
with cholera and was being obliterated. We marched another five or six miles in
a despairing silence
heightened by drenching rain. These were the first fruits we had seen of Nip pon
's promises of convalescent
camps skeletons with purplish skins, teeth that looked huge in shrunken faces an
d haunted eyes.
Within three weeks we were all to be reduced to the same traves ties of men.
Witt only three kilos to go the Japanese measured all distances by the metric sy
stem we halted for a short rest,
a "yazum6," We halted in a sudden bare patch of swampy ground at the foot of the
moun tain we had just
crossed. It was a mere saucer of treeless mud in the middle of the high-flanking
, jungle-covered mountains. At
its far end a track ran out of it past a palisaded camp on the right and a nativ
e camp in the usual state of
indescribable filth on the left. The palisaded camp was deserted, having been re
cently vacated by the
Pommies. The native camp seethed with Tamils. The track led into the mountains a
nd to a place known to us
as Kami II. Kanu II was our destination, according to Mr. Terai.
We sat in the mud, midst sick and dying and an agglomeration of dixies, axes, ch
angkols and kit bags, and
looked up that track. How much better, or worse, than all this would Kami II be?

Terai moved sympathetically among us and spoke for a few mo ments to the officer
in charge. That worthy
then detailed a dozen of us to stay in this saucer of mud and, on its tree-flank
ed border, just before the
deserted Pommy camp and almost opposite the Tamils, to cut out a headquarters fo
r our Japanese guards and
the Japanese administrative officers of H Force.
Objecting violently to being separated from our friends, we col lected our kit a
nd fell out from the main party.
I said good-bye to Hugh and Harry and Roy Death and a dozen or so more. Then the
y all marched away up
the track and into the mountain. It was the last time we who remained were ever
to see most of them or that
they were to see most of us. But there was no time for reflection. A short, stoc
ky guard, by name Kanemoto,
came bellowing over and within thirty seconds though we had just marched twenty
miles we were working,
hacking down trees and bamboo from the jungle. Our labours in Thailand had begun
.
KANEMOTOSAN
Kanemoto proved to be an unpleasant little man with exaggerated ideas about the
amount of work one
Australian can or is prepared to do in one day. I, on the other hand, had long s
ince conceived it as my duty
when working for the Japanese to do as little as possible and that only of the m
ost inferior quality. It was,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
therefore, fairly inevitable that, on the subject of building railway lines thro
ugh Thailand, First Class Private
Kanemoto and Gunner Braddon should eventually clash. We did so, with great and m
utual ill-will, the day
after our arrival.
For a fortnight thereafter Kanemoto endured our shortcomings with considerable l
ack of patience. In that time
we cleared a patch of jungle to a depth of about fifty yards and along a front o
f almost a hundred. In the
process we killed numerous highly venomous snakes and disturbed a family of babo
ons who withdrew
themselves in high dudgeon to the top of a far-off tree from which they screeche
d their disapproval. Their
voices are high-pitched and suffi ciently human to sound demented. At night it i
s an unpleasant noise.
Having made a clearing, we were then sent into the jungle to collect bamboo. Thi
s grew in huge
vine-entangled clumps of any thing up to forty lengths of bamboo, each length an
ything up to fifty feet in
height. Cutting it was a task made doubly unpleasant by its protective carpet of
needle-pointed spikes and by
its wilful refusal to fall even when every single stem had been severed. Lashed
to gether by the tough jungle
vines, the bamboo would remain ob durately upright When eventually, by shinning
up the centre of a clump
and hacking at the vines with a parang, the stems were freed and fell, one still
had the task of weaving a
forty-foot-long stem nine inches in diameter through the tangled undergrowth of
the jungle. It was a tiresome
task rendered none the easier by the fact that the cavity running down the centr
e of each bamboo was filled
with water, nor by Kanemoto's hoarse shouts of "One man one" and "Speedo".
Having collected sufficient lengths, we were then required to erect the scaffold
ing of a hut uprights, floor
supports and roof supports and then to lay attap on the roof and slats of split
bamboo on the floor and walls.
Crosspieces were bound onto uprights with wire: attap was secured to rafters wit
h vines. It was a primitive,
but effective, method of construction.
In that first fortnight all twelve of us succumbed to malaria more familiar to u
s as "The Bug" a fact which
maddened Kanemoto, who kept pointing out that he did not get malaria, so why sho
uld we. By way of answer,
we pointed to his protective clothing and our own G strings, to his mosquito-net
ted bed and our little nests in
the mud, to his bottles of quinine and atabrine of which we had none. He did not
accept this at all graciously
and kept us working until one either collapsed or one's temperature reached 104
by his ther mometer (of
which he was inordinately and childishly proud), whichever came first.
It was a combination of that thermometer and the third hut (an especially lavish
affair designed to house Terai
and the two senior Jap officers of H Force) that led to my final clash with Kane
moto. I was squatting astride a
crossbar, entrusted with the task of splicing the next crossbar along onto its u
pright support, when it occurred
to me that if I arranged the wire binding so that it merely looked as if it were
firmly secured then I would save
myself considerable exertion (always to be desired) and at the same time contriv
e the dis tinct possibility of
the crossbar's collapse, at some future date, onto the skull of someone from Jap
an. At the very least, I thought,
whoever it was, it would give him a shocking headache.
At that moment, my own head swam with the afteraffects of the previous day's fev
er and the man beside me
grabbed me to stop me falling off my perch. Observing the commotion, Kanemoto lo
oked up, his face surly,
and grunted "Currah!"
I said I was "biyoke [sick],"
"Biyoke-ka?" queried Kanemoto.
"Hei," I assented vigorously, assuming my best sick look.
As Kanemoto produced his beloved thermometer, one of my fellow workers handed up
a mugful of freshly
boiled water in case I felt dizzy again. Kanemoto passed the thermometer up and
indicated that I was to put it
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
in my mouth. As soon as his attention was distracted I seized the opportunity to
pop it into the water still very
hot instead. The result was most gratifying. The mercury rose right up to the to
p of the thermometer and read
a temperature the likes of which no mortal had ever survived before. I was certa
in that my Japanese friend
would be impressed. And in this I was not wrong.
Kanemoto looked at his thermometer and gasped with astonish ment. Then Terai and
Kanemoto took it to
their colonel, who looked at it and then at me with open admiration. Then came m
y undoing.
"Again one time," ordered the colonel, pointing first at the ther mometer and th
en at me. And at once the
obsequious Kanemoto swarmed, with that gymnastic skill which all Japanese soldie
rs pos sessed, up an
upright and onto the crossbar next to mine, the better to take my temperature. M
y sham wire binding lasted
about three seconds then, with a rending crash, the crossbar, and Kanemotosan, p
lunged to earth. As he glared
furiously upwards from where he lay, the mugful of nearly boiling water fell nea
tly over his head. At a single
blow the quality both of my work and of my fraudulent medical practices had been
revealed.
After a short interval during which, with the aid of a webbing belt, he attempte
d to convince me of my follies,
Kanemoto informed me that next morning I would be sent three kilos up to Kami II
.
"Kanu taxan cholera" he said balefully. There's a lot of cholera in Kanu." I kne
w exactly what he meant.
Next morning, therefore, our small party was lined up and Kane moto confronted u
s to conduct a purge of
those to be banished to cholera-ridden Kanu II. He was in a difficult position.
He disliked all of us and had
now to decide upon just whom he disliked most Remembering the events of the day
before, I was not
surprised when I was seeded number one. Terai, who had been most friendly over t
he past fourteen days and
who now stood at the gateway of the clearing watching this culling, solved the p
roblem of meeting my gaze
by turning his back.
Eight of us at last were honoured with the stamp of Kanemoto's especial dislike
and fell out to collect our
gear. I put my eating-irons and my toothbrush and my razor and my copy of Mein K
ampf in my sack and was
ready to go. Kanu next stop.
Kanu was not a nice prospect. When the remainder of our force had arrived there
they had found only mud
and jungle. They had been compelled to hack a clearing out of this jungle and at
the same time send out every
man who could walk to hack a cutting through a mountain. The cutting was deep: t
he tools sledge hammers,
crow bars, wedges, a small quantity of gelignite, changkols and baskets. They wo
rked sixteen hours a day,
then returned to do more work in the quagmire of their camp. Draining, digging l
atrines, building a
cookhouse, collecting rations from the barges on the river more than a mile down
a precipitous track below
them. Cholera had broken out and every day more men suddenly vomited a greenish
fluid, their bowels
melted, their flesh withered off their bones and looking like strips of potato t
hat had been baked to a crisp in
an oven and then allowed to go cold they died. They had no drugs. Their only sus
tenance was die tireless
strength and devotion of Major Pagan.
There also, as in every camp along the whole length of the pro posed railway, th
ey were harassed by camp
administrations under the control of Japanese junior N.C.O,'s, or even privates,
and by Korean guards Koreans
who, knowing nothing of the refinements of the 38th Parallel and acknowledging n
o difference between those
of their countrymen who came from the north and those who came from the south, w
ere quick to implement
with the utmost violence the demands made upon our men by the Japanese engineers
(than whom God has
created no nastier breed).
And at the moment when we eight should have marched out of the gate and up the m
ud jungle track to Kanu
II, a Nip surveyor arrived from down the line and demanded workers for a special
task in his area. Almost
disappointed, Kanemoto surrendered us to him. We were to go and live in the cent
re of the small saucer of
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
swamp that lay a quarter of a mile away. We were to work there collecting fuel a
nd water for the Japanese
reinforcements marching through Thailand up to Burma; we were to bury the native
s who died so untidily and
so regularly all round this particular area; in our spare time, we were to work
on the cuttings and
embankments of the line that would inn from Tarsao to Kanu.
As we marched out behind our new guard, his stocky, puttee-clad legs taking quic
k short strides, Terai said: "I
am sorry," and glanced downwards, whilst Kanemoto, endearing to the last, mocked
at us: "Di-sana taxan
malaria. Ashita mati mati [Down there is much malaria tomorrow you will be dead]
,"
One of our number, a round-faced, curly-haired little man of about forty, glared
at him aggressively.
"Cheerful little bastard you are," he commented.
Our new abode was not savoury. It consisted of the weather-battered fly of a ten
t beneath which was a rough
flooring of split bamboos raised a few inches off the mud by more bamboo logs la
id flat. It was neither
rainproof nor windproof and it hummed with mosqui toesthose mosquitoes whose par
asite-laden bite had kept
the in terior of Thailand barren and uninhabited for thousands of years. Between
our tent and the jungle on the
right lay two huts in which lived the Japs. To our left a small stream nothing m
ore than a drain wound
sluggishly across the mud and separated us from the greater part of the swamp an
d the jungle which lay
beyond it. In this stream the Indians from the camp just up the track were accus
tomed to wash, drink and
excrete a charming triple practice from which nothing could dissuade them.
3 "ULCERS AND BUSHIDO"
In consequence of it there were always two or three of them lying on the side of
the track in their death throes.
Their fellow country men apparently felt no compassion for them as they lay ther
e, foam on their lips, dying.
They provided them with no water, nor attention, nor comfort just padded past as
if there were no one there.
And when, hours later, they died, Nippon ordered us to bury them just across the
stream from our tent. So we
carried these graceless corpses and interred them in shallow graves because a fo
ot was the deepest the guards
would allow. And when it rained the covering soil washed off them and arms and l
egs contorted and stiffened
in death before we had found them pointed skywards out of the black mud. Pointed
until they decomposed or
the vultures ate them.
Against this background of guards on the one side, exposed corpses on the other,
the railway approaching
from Tarsao behind us and the annihilation that was befalling Kanu II ahead of u
s, we settled down till
September of 1943.
Once again time ceased to have any significance. For almost a year no man knew w
hat day of the week nor
what week of the month nor even what month of the year it was. It was just 1943
and the Rail way. If one
were to survive it was essential not to acknowledge the horror that lay all arou
nd, still more not to perceive the
effect it had upon oneself. It was not wise ever to look in a mirror. Life accor
dingly evolved into a blur of
continuous work, people dying, guards bellowing, heavy loads to be carried, feve
r which came in tides of heat
and cold on alternate days, dysentery ana hunger. All those became the normal. U
pon them, occasionally, an
event superim posed itself with sufficient violence to be remembered.
There was little scope for planning one's own way of life. To preserve my health
, I vowed to wash whenever it
rained, lying under the dripping edge of the fly, and to clean my teeth every da
y, using the toothbrush
Piddington had given me and ground-up charcoal for powder. Charcoal was also use
ful as a medicine against
dysentery. To preserve some dignity, I vowed I would shave at least once a week
if only I could remember the
days. To preserve my self-respect, I vowed that whenever necessary I would make
the latrines or bust; and to
preserve at least some mental agility, I determined to learn off by heart one pa
ge a day of Mr. Hitler's Mein
Kampf. As the days succeeded one another for the rest of that black year, this p
articular vow became
increasingly difficult, but I managed never to yield to the temptation of excusi
ng myself from my task and in
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
return derived a perverse pleasure from the daily assimilation of so much vile p
rose.
Terai arrived one morning from the headquarters camp just up the track. He said
that he had bad news. Roy
Death had died and Harry Peck was dying. He was sorry.
I thanked him for letting me know. He shrugged and asked was there anything I wa
nted. Remembering the
huge Japanese stocks, and that the Netherland East Indies were its source, I sai
d: "Yes, quinine" to which he
replied apologetically that quinine was diffi cult, and with that he left.
We went to work in a cutting. High above, at the cutting's top, stood the guards
, Koreans and Japanese,
throwing stones and young boulders at the men who slaved below. In the cutting m
en worked in pairs, one
holding a rock drill, the other hitting it with a sixteenpound sledge hammer. Al
l day long one swung the
hammer, the other twisted the drill. Hit, twist, hit All day long in turns, and
at night some more by the light of
bamboo and resin flares and a most prompt thrashing for any pair who stopped for
so much as a second for
any reason. So it went on, hit... twist... hit, with every now and then fingersi
crushed with the sledge hammer,
or heads split open by irritable guards and legs cut by the rocks which they shi
ed down from above cuts which
in a few weeks were to develop into the huge ulcers that caused even more misery
than cholera.
When the holes had been drilled deep enough by this process, known as "hammer an
d tap," gelignite was
inserted and the area blasted. The shattered rock was then carted in baskets, or
man handled in slaps, to a cliff
and there thrown over.
An English lad collapsed on the edge of this cliff and fell far down onto the ja
gged pile of broken rock at its
foot. The guard peered over. "More one skip, * he ordered. No one moved. With an
impatient heave he
dragged the lever of the skip himself and a ton of rubble crashed down on the bo
dy below. Only two men
spoke. One looked the guard squarely in the eye: "Your turnll come, you rotten b
astard," he said quietly: the
other, glancing down at the pile of rubble which was now a grave, spoke an epita
ph: "Half his luck," he said,
"half his luck"
The philosophy of "half his luck" was one which, though I could readily understa
nd it, I could not accept. I
had not the quiet fatalism about my impending extinction which these other calml
y courageous men had. And
yet, there being no room for optimism in Thailand-* there being in fact no such
thing as optimism in Thailand
some such insulating philosophy against the physically and mentally cor rosive c
ircumstances in which we
existed was essential. Mine, which I found effective enough, was simply "It didn
't matter nothing matters."
The deaths of my friends, the ugly diseases that beset us, the constant reductio
n of rations that already seemed
impossibly small, the bestiality of guards against all these things, whenever th
ey seemed likely to impinge
upon my mind, I flung up the conscious barrier of "It doesn't matter nothing mat
ters."
It was a kind of narcotic, a self-induced drug, and no doubt like all drugs and
narcotics taken habitually
damaging. The fact re mains that, starting in Thailand, and continuing on right
through my captivity, and
stopping I'm not sure where, I withdrew into the ostrichlike burrow where "nothi
ng mattered," and there,
mentally secure, I remained.
Terai visited us again. He was very sorry, he said, but Hugh Moore had cholera,
Harry Peck was still dying,
Reg Dudley and Dan Winters (the two friends who had been so unsympathetic about
the grenade under Jack
Mullins* throat at Pant Sulong) were dead. I thanked him for his news and he sai
d he had brought me
something to help. "Quinine?" I asked hopefully, for all eight of us now suffere
d from fever every alternate
day; but he replied, "No, quinine is diffi cult," and gave me his present When h
e had left I looked at it. A
small, expensively produced book called The Japanese Art of Ar ranging Flowers.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
We were taken to an embankment built by natives and there re quired to drive spi
kes, known as "dogs," into
the sleepers laid along it. This was done, at Nippon's instructions, in tune to
a chant of "Ichi ni san-i shf
(which means only "One... two... three four,' and is not, therefore, a very inte
resting chant). I found swinging a
sledge hammer with seven others to the endless accompani ment of "Ichi ni san-i
shf dull in the extreme and
wherever I was so employed the quality of the Thailand Railway became very infer
ior indeed.
It therefore came as no surprise to us that the first train to push its way up f
rom Tarsao towards Kami was
derailed on one of the more precipitous bends where we had worked. Its accompany
ing sentry was severely
injured. We were called out of our tent late at night to help extricate this war
rior. On seeing him, securely
pinned under the wreckage, we recognized him as a gentleman of whom we had no ca
use at all to be fond, so
we worked with great clumsiness and lack of speed. His completely abandoned scre
aming throughout this op
eration once again gave the lie to Oriental stolidity.
Having finally disentangled him, we marched back towards our tent only to be con
fronted, at die entrance to
the swamp, with a Nisson truck which had optimistically been driven up beside th
e railway and was now
almost irretrievably bogged down in the mud. Not quite irretrievably because Nip
pon already had thirty
prisoners from other camps on the end of a tow line and when we appeared he adde
d us to their number and
made it quite clear that there we stayed until we lugged the truck free:
Waist-deep in mud, we jerked the truck forward an inch at a time. At first the g
uard insisted on his absurd
*lchi ni sani-i shf* chant, but we very quickly abandoned that and reverted to t
he Australian "One.. * two.. *
HEAVE.* Eventually the Nisson was manhandled about forty yards to a small patch
of dry soil. The sun was
just rising. It was time to start work.
As we shuffled over towards the guard hut to get our orders for the new day's sh
ift I noticed that the suction of
the mud during the towing of the truck had dragged the soles off my boots. The r
est of my stay in Thailand
was spent barefooted.
The oldest member of our party died of what looked suspiciously like cholera. An
other fell ill and followed
him shortly afterwards. We were now six and I found that my limbs no longer func
tioned very well. There
was an angry swelling in my feet which made them look like purple balloons the t
oes were cocktail sausages
attached to them like teats on an udder.
As I looked at them one of the others, pointing at my bloated extremities, asked
: What's the trouble?"
"Edema,' I told him.
"Christ!" he said, much impressed; then, cautiously, "What's that?"
"Swelling," I told him.
"Silly bastard," he laughed, "why didn't you say so first time?"
But, edema or swelling or whatever the cause, my legs now ceased walking either
easily or quickly and
whenever any weight was put on my back they folded up. Since Nippon's only objec
t in bringing us all to
Thailand had been to put weights on our backs and then get us to carry them else
where this condition of mine
did not bode well for the future.
And, in truth, things would have gone very badly indeed for me had it not been f
or the generous help of the
men with me. At aH times they covered up for me so that die guards did not reali
ze how slowly I worked. And
when they had finished their own quota of work, then they would do mine too.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
In this respect one Snowy Bernard did most. He was unfortunate enough to have pa
ired up with me when we
first started work. Now that my arms seemed to have no strength with an axe he w
ould chop down his own
timber, then mine. When my legs crumpled under the weight of carrying the timber
particularly the long bam
boosback to camp, he would deliver his own, then come back and deliver mine. And
never was there any
suggestion of condescension but only that inexhaustible readiness on the part of
the ordinary man to lend a
hand whenever it was needed.
And all the time that Snowy and the three other men carried me so steadfastly, I
became more and more of a
burden. The swelling spread up my legs so that ankles and knees vanished into tw
o water-filled columns of
suet. Then my trunk began to swell with that same ominous suggestion of liquid b
eneath the skin tissues and
even my eyes became merely two slits in a puffy sphere. I was constantly surpris
ed by the slowness of my
movements. I was not aware of being slow, but my companions and I had only to st
art walking and in thirty
seconds I was thirty yards behind them. Then Snowy would stop and come back and
shove me firmly along
until we caught up whereupon, left to my own devices, I would at once flounder t
o the rear again.
The guards began to take an unconcealed interest in my condition and daily showe
d their surprise that I was
still alive. "Ashita mati mati" they would say, pointing towards the crop of arm
s and legs that protruded from
the washed-out graves beyond our tent, and drawing a mocking cross on the ground
. If I had required any
stimu lant to prevent me from succumbing to the beriberi that so bloated me thos
e daily jibes by the guards
would have done the job per fectly. Nevertheless the morning at last arrived whe
n I found that not only could
I not walk as fast as the others, I could not walk at all. This was disconcertin
g and I decided that I must see an
M.O. Accordingly that night I left the tent on my hands and knees, eluded the gu
ards, and crawled towards the
headquarters camp. As I covered that quarter of a mile I found myself completely
at a loss to understand why
babies should spend the first twelve months at least of their lives propelling t
hemselves in quite such an
exhausting manner. The moon rose. In the powerful light it shed I decided that T
hailand must be the only
place in the world where all that moon beams bring out is decay and mud and the
demented high-pitched love
song of baboons. My musings on this subject were interrupted by the M.O. himself
, who spotted me
ploughing infant-like through the mire and wanted to know what the hell I though
t I was doing.
I replied that I thought I was coming to see him. He parried this with a questio
n as to whence I came. When I
told him he pointed out that, that being one of the most cholera-ridden areas in
Thailand, I was extremely
unwelcome and would I kindly stay where I was.
I said: "What, out here in the mud?" and he replied: "Yes," as if that were the
most reasonable thing in the
world. I was deeply aggrieved and said so. He, however, was adamant and eventual
ly he persuaded me to
remove my unwholesome presence altogether by throwing me a small jar. It landed
about ten yards up in a
pool of slime. I crawled up and retrieved it and, wiping it clean on some leaves
, looked at the label.
"Marmite," it read.
"You have beriberi," he shouted.
"I know," I replied from the mud.
"Take a spoonful of that a day," he advised.
"Will it do any good?" I asked.
"Might," he replied, and, returning firmly inside the palisade of the headquarte
rs camp, indicated that the
subject was closed. I crawled back to our camp, where I found the guards very cr
oss that I had eluded them. I
took a spoonful of marmite and, exhausted, fell asleep.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
The railway nosed its way into our swamp and along with it came about forty tent
s to house the batches of
natives who, impressed in Malaya, were shipped daily up the line. Thousands upon
thousands went up into the
heart of Thailand and Burma. It is thought that 130,000 of them died. The Japane
se preferred them to die
rather than return to Malaya and tell the truth about Co-Prosperity.
Each night, therefore, we received forty tentfuls of nativesabout a thousand men
, because the Japanese worked
on the principle of at least twenty men to an English Army four-man tent and eac
h morning we buried the
dead they left in those tents when they moved out They were feckless, gutless, s
elfish and careless of anyone
but them selves, those natives; but one could not help feeling sorry for them as
they moved up in daily droves
to be slaughterd.
One thing they did have, though, that we could well use money. With their infini
te capacity for commerce,
they liad all arrived in Thailand with thousands of dollars. Here, it seemed to
me, was an opportunity to repay
my companions for something at least of what they had done for me.
I sold my only pair of shorts they would no longer fit my swollen body anyway to
a Thai for $3.75. Then, on
the first dark night, armed with the $3.75 and a stick round which I twined my l
eft leg, I started off. A pace
forward with the right leg: then swing the stick, and on it my left leg, in a lo
oping arc forward: then a pace
with the right again. I made quite good speed in the dark and was well pleased w
ith myself. About three hours
kter, having eluded all guards and patrols on the way, I reached the next camp d
own the line where the Thais
sold cigarettes. I bought $3.75 worth and then returned, looping and pacing, to
our own camp, reaching it just
before dawn. I sold the $3.75 worth of cigarettes to the natives for $7.00, and
next night repeated the
operation. In a week we had $37 in kitty with which to buy any food available fr
om the barges down at the
river. I felt a little less of a liability.
We were sent down to the river and then given one hundred and twenty pounds each
of rice to carry. The track
up the mountain, being clay and wet, was murderous. To our surprise we carted th
e rations not to Kami but
past it to the next camp, about eight kilos up.
Outside Kanu, in the small stream that trickled down from the mountain above, la
y a naked man. When asked
why he lay there, he pointed to his legs. Tiny fish nibbled at the rotten flesh
round the edges of his ulcers.
Then he pointed inside the camp. Other ulcer sufferers, reluctant to submit to t
his nibbling process, wore the
only dressings available a strip of canvas torn from a tent and soaked in eusol.
Their ulcers ran the whole
length of their shinbones in chan nels of putrescence. Looking back at the man i
n the stream, it was
impossible to decide, even though he was insane, which treatment was the best
We reached the next camp and found it practically deserted almost all the origin
al inhabitants were dead.
There were proud signs of the struggle for survival those men had put up. Carefu
lly constructed latrines,
spotless surrounds, an overhead pipeline made from bamboos which brought cholera
-free water from its
source two or three miles away and hundreds of feet up at the top of the mountai
n. This pipeline led to a
shower centre with a bamboo floor and separate cubicles (pathetic symbol of man'
s desire for even a little
privacy) and to a cookhouse that was all clean wood and care fully swept packed
earth. All of these were
refinements installed after gruelling sixteen-hour shifts of work at the expense
of sleep and the recharging of
their energies so vital to the next day's shift. But none of this had been enoug
h flies carried the cholera germs
and mosquitoes the malarial parasites. Starvation and slavery did the rest. Now,
as we set out back to our own
camp, there were only a few skeletonlike travesties of humanity left and the big
fire where they burnt their
dead.
These fires flared at every camp where cholera struck. They lighted the way out
to work in the dark before
dawn: they guided the men back through the dark wetness of the jungle long after
dusk. And always, lying
round them in sticklike bundles, were the bodies that awaited cremationbodies at
which the returning men
peered closely as they came in to see if any of their mates lay among them. And
every now and then, as they
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
filed past, came that muttered: "Half his luck."
About these fires a strange story was told. At one camp the task of attending to
the pyre and of consigning the
bodies to the flames was given to an Australian who, being without brains or emo
tions or finer susceptibilities
of any kind, was more than happy at his work.
He stripped the dead of their gold tooth caps: he stole fearlessly from the guar
ds, who dared not touch him lest
he contaminate them: he cooked what he stole for one only stole food, or somethi
ng that could be bartered for
food or tobacco in those days on the fire where he burnt the bodies. He was the
complete moron.
It was his practice before dealing with the fresh batch of bodies that arrived e
ach morning to boil himself a
"cuppa cha" and watch the working party fall in to be marched away to the cuttin
gs. He liked watching the
working parties fall in to march away because he stayed at home by his fire wher
e, even in the monsoonal
rains, he could keep warm and do his cooking. Upon one particular morning he sip
ped his tea out of the jam
tin that served as a mug and watched the parade. As he watched he rolled some to
bacco in a strip of the tissue
that clings to the inside of a bamboo: then, his fag completed, he picked up a b
ody and tossed it easily from
yards off (for it was only light) onto the fire. He enjoyed the revulsion this c
aused. He did it every morning
just before the workers marched out. Grinning at them as they glowered angrily,
he then shambled to the
fringe of the fire to light his cigarette.
As he leant forward to pick up a faggot the body he had just tossed into the fla
mes, its sinews contracted,
suddenly sat bolt up tight, and grunted, and in its hand thrust out a flaming br
and onto the cigarette in the
moron's mouth.
With a scream of terror the man who had burnt hundreds of bodies with callous in
difference fell backwards,
his hands over his eyes. When the workers reached him he was jabbering and mad.
They took him to the hut that housed the sick, an attap roof draped over a patch
of mud in which all over one
another lay hundreds of men. For days he lay there silent, knowing nothing. Then
one night he suddenly
remembered and screamed, screamed piercingly and long so that, even though it wa
s forbidden, the medical
orderly lit a resin flare and rushed down to where he lay to see why he screamed
.
Then, as the orderly leant over him, the moron sat up. Flare and moronic face we
re abruptly within inches of
one another. With a scream more wild and piercing than ever the moron dropped ba
ck dead*
Terai called again and we had a strange conversation. He was sorry, he said, but
many hundreds of my friends
had died at Kanu. Too many to remember the names.
"Moore?" I asked.
"No," replied Terai, "not yet, nor Peck. But many hundreds of others. Arthur Far
mer is one,' I found it difficult
to understand why he bothered with these condolences, but he interrupted my thou
ghts.
"You have read the book?"
"What book? * I asked vaguely, at which he looked hurt, so that I remembered the
expensive little volume on
flower arrangement and quickly said yes, I had read it.
"You liked it?"
I said that it was quite interesting but impossible to reconcile with the atroci
ous mentality of the guards we
had struck in Thai land.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"They are only coolies, you must understand," explained Terai, "I am sorry that
they behave badly."
"They're pirates," I pointed out, "you are an officer: you could stop them if yo
u were really sorry."
"It is difficult," Terai explained.
"Like the quinine," I suggested, and he allowed anger to flicker for just a seco
nd in those intelligent eyes.
Then he glanced down again and repeated: "It is difficult. I have brought you an
other book." Realizing that an
awkward subject was thus being closed, I said, "Thank you," and added that it wo
uld make a pleasant change
from Mein Kampj.
"Why do you read Mein KampfF" Terai enquired*
"Mainly because you confiscated my Shaw," I told him.
"Socialism is not good in Nippon,* Terai explained. Then: "Do you enjoy Mein Kam
pfP"
I told him that I didn t, but that it served its purpose as I learnt off by hear
t a page of it a day for the good of
my memory, if not of my soul, and that I reckoned that that should see me over t
he worst part of the war.
"But, Mr. Braddon," he demurred, "the war will last a hundred years,'
"Ah so-ka?" I answered him, using a common Japanese expression of surprise. "A h
undred years? Six months
ago it was all going to be over by the fifteenth of August of this year. Why the
change?"
"It will be a hundred years," he repeated stubbornly, "but Britain cannot win,'"

I told him that on one of the most recent pages of Mein Kampf that I had committ
ed to memory Mr. Hitler had
written that the British Empire could not lose a war"
"Hitler is a fool," Terai snapped.
"He's your ally," I pointed out.
"He is still a fool."
"I'm glad," I told him, "that we don't think the same about Mr. Roosevelt."
Terai flushed darkly at this and there was silence for some seconds. Then, with
a bright smile, he slapped his
sword hilt and said: "I must go."
"By the way," he added, as he prepared to leave our tent, "I am writing a play."

"In English or Nippon-go?" I asked.
"English," he said proudly, "you must read it when it is complete and give me yo
ur criticism." I promised that
I would.
"Sayonara" he said, in farewell, and left a slim, good-looking young man whom I
didn't understand at all. I
glanced at this last book he had given me. It was entitled Bushido or Japanese C
hivalry.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
By this time the fluids of the wet beriberi which swamped me were flopping round
in my chest, having crept
up from my legs, and a most unwelcome sound it was. The Nips now abandoned their
drawing of graves and
crosses on the ground and instead mimed a man drowning. I had become indifferent
towards many modes of
death, but drowning could never be one of them. The only preventative I could th
ink of was to consume
sufficient Vitamin B tablets (they would have, of course, to be stolen from the
Japs) to over come the
deficiency which caused the beriberi.
A large force of Japanese reinforcements came sloshing up the jungle trail, shov
ing mountain artillery along
with them. Their hoarse, rhythmic shouts of "Esau, Esau * as they pushed mountai
n guns along mud tracks
sounded harsh and bad-tempered. They were not misleading.
Though we had just finished a particularly heavy shift we were routed out to lig
ht fires, boil water, cook food.
An officer thrust his waterproof cape at me and indicated that I was to dry it.
I was shivering with a malarial
rigour.
Standing in front of the fire with the cape, I found it impossible not to sway o
n my unstable legs. Soon the
inevitable occurred the cape caught alight. Before I extinguished the flame one
large corner of the gentleman's
garment had vanished into a tiny heap of ash and a black cloud of pungent smoke.

The gentleman himself was not slow to notice any of these things. With a hoarse
"Currah," he leapt up. He
kicked, leaving a perfect impression of his toecap in my sodden flesh for hours
afterwards: he swiped with his
bayonet, cutting open the back of my head: and he then, for good measure, shoved
me firmly into the fire.
Bloated as I was, I was slow to move* I was surprised to notice that, though the
skin bubbled and the flesh
smelt singed, I felt nothing. The beriberi had at least done that for me, I refl
ected gratefully. On the other
hand, however little it hurt, one couldn't afford to remain sprawled in a fire f
or long. Snowy solved the
problem by ignoring the officer's bellows and dragging me out. It was all over i
n seconds, but it did nothing to
heighten in my mind my impressions of Bushido or Jap anese Chivalry.
Muttering to himself, as Snowy brushed me free of embers, the officer took his c
harred cape and placed it
resentfully over his other possessions. Following his actions with a wary eye, I
noticed that from the top of his
haversack there protruded a large bottle of Vitamin B tablets.
When I left the guardhouse, so did the bottle. That night I sat up and ate solid
ly the small brown tablets of
bran so rich in Vitamin B. They did not make easy eating, but I was a man who fo
r a hundred days had been
mocked by the Japanese as a perambulating corpse, so I continued munching. By mo
rning the bottle was
empty. I did not require my small ration of rice.
About two days later I reaped the profits of my theft. We had just gone to our b
ed spaces and I was
laboriously scrubbing clean (with a few drops of water in my mug and my toothbru
sh) the burns I had
received on my hands, arms and legs as a result of being booted so unceremonious
ly into a fire. It suddenly
became necessary to urinate. I crawled the thirty yards to our makeshift urinal
and obliged, and started to
crawl back to the tent. I had only gone half way, however, when it became necess
ary to reverse. Eventually, I
stayed there and every ten minutes or so for two days fluid poured out of me. My
chest no longer looked
puffy: my stomach lost its thick pregnant look: my knees reappeared: then my ank
les: then my toes. The
beriberi bloated pudding was gone. In its place stood a skeleton which had never
in all its life been so pleased
with its physical condition than at this moment, when, according to the Japanese
quartermaster's scales, it
weighed eighty-one pounds.
The death roll all the way up the line was at this time so appalling that even m
ore violent representations than
usual were made by the British officers commanding each party to the Japanese ad
ministration. The
representations were received by Colonel Fukuda, upon whose good will we all dep
ended for food and drugs.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"The Japanese," he said, "are prepared to work: you must be prepared to work. Th
e Japanese are prepared to
eat less to save the strain on a difficult supply route: you must be prepared to
eat less. The Japanese are
prepared to die: you must be prepared to die." When, to this specious argument,
the British officer replied that
that was all very well, but in actual fact the Japs did no work: ate as much as
ever, and by virtue of regular
doses of Vitamin B, quinine and anti-cholera serum did not die, the honourable c
olonel merely shrugged his
shoulders and replied: "There are plenty more pris oners of war,' That was his f
inal answer.
I lay alone in the tent one day, shuddering with the uncontrollable animal shive
rs of fever. We had been given
a quota of rock to carry and the rest of the men had sent me packing.
"Have a spine-bash, Russ," Snowy said, "we'll get it done without you,'
Much of the day passed in a haze of shivering nothing, it seemed, could ever ind
uce warmth again. Then,
suddenly, the sweat broke through, the coldness vanished and raging heat consume
d everything. By noon I
had drunk all the water in my bottle. By midafternoon I was looking with longing
eyes at the water bottle in
the kit of a man who slept next to me a lad called Jimmy. Five minutes later I h
ad furtively uncorked that
bottle. I knew what I was doing. I was stealing water, more precious than gold,
from a man who at that
moment was doing my work. Breaking the one hard and fast rule that every man is
responsible for providing
his own water. I drank a mouthful. Then, with what little will re mained, I forc
ed myself to recork the bottle,
put it back where it had been (where exactly had it been? I felt sick at the pro
spect of being so easily
discovered) and then crawled outside away from temptation. I spent the rest of t
he day and the night until my
companions returned crouching by a fire, watching the vultures eating the latest
disinterred native corpse and
hating the environment that had re duced me to water stealing.
As soon as they came in, I called Jimmy over. "I pinched some of your water this
afternoon," I told him. He
stared at me squarely and I felt like squirming. "Didn't you have any of your ow
n?" he asked. "Yes," I said,
and he looked a little angry: "but I drank it all." For a moment Jimmy was silen
t. Then: "That's the trouble
with the Bug," he said, "makes you mighty thirsty." He stooped and entered the t
ent; put his hand down
instinctively to where his water bottle should have been; groped for a second an
d then came out.
"Didn't even put her back where she belongs, you bastard," he grinned, as he str
aightened up outside the tent
flap.
"Had an idea I hadn't," I confessed miserably.
He passed the bottle over. "There y'are," he said, "have a good swig." And as I
hesitated: "Go on... be in it I'll
boil some water up later and well fill all the bottles." So together we finished
off his water: and then, armed
with two petrol cans, one on either end of a pole slung across his shoulders, Ji
mmy plodded off into the night
towards the watering hole half a mile away.
The drive to get the railway completed suddenly heightened. Every thing became d
ominated by "Speedo." All
requests for "yazumes" were greeted with the answer *azum nei": all requests for
more food were greeted
with the answer: "Messi messi nei." By day and by night parties of men, naked ex
cept for their G strings and
the canvas bandages round their ulcers, marched to the cuttings and the embankme
nts and the bridgeworks of
the railway. Their joints stood out grotesquely as they walked stiffly by, all g
race and rhythm gone from
bodies which, though still young, looked as old as Death itself. Their eyes glow
ed deeply within gaunt faces
and the skin over their thighbones thighbones which protruded like axeheads was
worn through in great red
patches of flesh where they slept on their sides.
Terai came down to give me a list of thirty names of men who had died within the
last few days. He was, he
said, very sorry.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"There are so many," he said softly. There were indeed. With relief I noticed th
at both Hugh and Harry were
still alive. "They must be putting up a good fight for it," I said, almost to my
self,
"Whor asked Terai.
"Moore and Peck," I told him.
"They are very lucky," Terai declared; then, before I could point out that in Th
ailand there was no such thing
as luck, he went on: "Mr. Braddon, why are you so yellow and thin?" His grimacin
g face conveyed the
impression that I was hideous, which more or less confirmed my own views.
I told him I was no thinner than most of his prisoners and that we were all thin
because a diet of a few ounces
of rice a day plus some dried seaweed for sixteen hours* work was not enough. I
told him I was yellow (and
as I said the word I grinned, because it seemed such an odd question for a Nip t
o ask: but at once his lips
tightened and I knew that this was not a safe subject for grins, so I continued
quickly), I was yellow because
for four months on every second day I had been shaken with f evqr and had had no
quinine to suppress it.
Terai opened his mouth to speak, but I forestalled him: "I know," I said, "quini
ne is difficult." I felt that that
round went to Braddon.
Mr. Terai, however, proceeded smoothly to ignore all this un pleasantness. Click
ing his sword up and down in
its scabbard as he stood before me I sat on the bamboo floor of the tent killing
lice he said: "Well, I have some
good news for you at last." I wondered what it could be. The Emperor of Japan de
ad or Colonel Fukuda boiled
in oil or an extra ounce of rice a day on our ration dozens of things flashed th
rough my mind as I looked
questioningly up at him. Banging his sword with an air of finality back into its
scabbard, he announced: Italy
is out of the war."
This was a great disappointment to me. I in fact, everyone in Thailandhad known
for two days, via our illicit
radios and the grapevine, that Italy was out of the war. It would not, however,
be wise to say so. So I just said:
"Is it? That's good to hear."
But Mr. Terai was no fool. "You are not surprised, Mr. Braddon," he observed. Th
is, I realized, was a point
Although I had not said *1 know" to his news, I had not looked surprised at it.
That had been a mistake. I
must retrieve it.
"No, I'm not," I said, "they're lousy soldiers,"
"But Italy has not just lost a battle," Terai pointed out, "she is out of the wa
r." He paused. "And you were not
surprised. You must have known. How did you know, Mr. Braddon?"
This was nasty, but I stuck to my guns. I did not know. I was not surprised. The
y were lousy soldiers.
Terai repeated that, if I was not surprised, I must have known. Where had I hear
d it? Who had a radio?
Perhaps I had better return to headquarters till the matter was cleared up.
Still repeating that I had heard nothing about it until he told me and that the
Italians were all lousy soldiers, I
left the tent with Mein Kampf, my razor, my toothbrush and eating-irons in my sa
ck, and my water bottle tied
round my waist. Mr. Terai and I walked amicably along the fresh laid track of th
e railway to the head quarters
camp. As we entered, Kanemoto scowled savagely at me and I feeling that I might
as well be hung for a sheep
as a lamballowed myself the pleasure of scowling savagely back.
For several days thereafter Terai and a friend of his from the Kempe-Tai questio
ned me gently but firmly
about how I must have known about Italy's surrender not to be surprised at the n
ews: and I, in my turn, gave
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
them the line that the Italians, as soldiers, were so lousy that no one possibly
could be surprised.
Meantime, a swift surprise search had been conducted for radios in all camps up
the line, and several suspects
had been arrested. Others were severely bashed. Then the uproar subsided and my
own case to my vast relief
was dropped. I had not cared for the idea of more intensive Kempe-Tai questionin
g as to where P.O.W,'s got
their news. I was, however, retained at the headquarters camp, where Terai was m
ost agreeable. But I no
longer felt at all confident of Terai.
The days succeeded one another and the railway nosed its way well past the headq
uarters camp and into the
mountain that led to Kanu. The atrocious project was nearing its completion.
Half a dozen of us were sent up just beyond Kanu to lay some lines. The "Speedo"
was on at full pressure and
this particular section lagged. We marched along the newly laid track past Kanu
a sham bles of rotting tents
and decaying bamboo huts which spewed out rotting and decaying bodies only disti
nguishable from corpses
be cause they breathed and moaned for water. Past a British camp on the right wh
ere very few were left and
those mainly incapacitated with ulcers that snarled at you, the lips of flesh dr
awn back and baring shinbones
and pus. They were dressing these terrifying wounds with the inevitable canvas (
used and reused a thousand
times and by successive sufferers as each last one died) and water in which was
dissolved a minute quantity of
salt.
We worked until the required section was completed. Then only did our Korean gua
rd grunt "Yazume all
men," and we lie down to sleep.
We had not been asleep long, lying on the track itself, when some one shook me i
nto wakefulness. "What's
that?" he asked: and at the same moment I heard a demented, high-pitched, near b
ut not quite human
screaming, piercing and prolonged.
"Baboons," I reassured him. "Horrible ruddy noise, isn't it Japanese Gestapo."
"That's no baboon, mate," lie argued, "I heard plenty of baboons and I seen em.
And that ain't no baboon." We
listened again, and again the shrill shriek cut through the jungle darkness like
ice run across the back of your
neck.
"Christ, that's horrible," said the other. Then, as the sound came weirdly at us
again, "C mon, mate. That's no
baboon, that's a man."
Though I didn't want to go with him and find what caused a man to make a noise l
ike that I lacked the courage
to say so. We stole down the line, my companion sure-footed and determined: I co
n stantly irritated by the
universal law of railway lines that no two sleepers shall lie at an interval tha
t shall fit either one walking or
one running pace.
We covered a quarter of a mile and the sound now came from our right. We cut int
o the jungle, our progress
now noisy and difficult, but still dominated by that demented voice. It seemed s
oon to lie ahead of us again. I
called to my companion: "It's no use," I urged, "it must be a baboon. Keeps movi
ng round."
"No, it don t, mate," he replied simply, "we do" and he pushed on. So I followed
and almost immediately we
found the source of the noise. The wreckage of a man, mere bones, skin and hair,
stood clutching a railing, his
mouth wide open, screaming, mad, inhuman.
Two figures suddenly appeared beside him and carried him away. He appeared not t
o notice and the
screaming continued. My com panion and I followed them until they placed him on
the ground in a small hut
with four or five others.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"One of your blokes?" I asked.
"Yes, chum," said the Pommy, an R.A.M.C. orderly.
"What's the matter with him? * demanded my companion, his voice husky.
"Cerebral malaria," the Pommy told us. "He was trying to get down to the water.
It's got a fascination for em."
"Many like that?"
"No, not so far," said the orderly, "but if we don't get quinine soon, we'll all
be like it"
"Bloody lovely thought that is," my companion said.
"How old was that bloke?" I asked.
"Twenty-two. He's not dead yet, you know." We started to move off. "He will be s
oon, though," he added.
"What we need is quinine."
But then quinine, I knew, was difficult. Wearily we two Aus tralians threaded ou
r way through the jungle, on
to the rail track with the sleepers that didn't fit any step and back to the lit
tle group of sleeping men. Slightly
apart from them the Korean lay on a groundsheet, his close-cropped skull pillowe
d on his haversack, snoring
gently. My companion picked up a sledge hammer and looked thoughtfully at the bl
ack bristly skull.
"Forget it," I said, "it wouldn't make any difference anyway." Dropping the hamm
er beside the recumbent
Korean, the other man nodded and brushed his hands together absent-mindedly, as
if he d just finished a job.
"You could be right, mate, * he said, lowering himself onto the ground. "Happy d
reams."
The line was finished. From Bangkok to Rangoon it ran uninter ruptedlyexcept tha
t the Royal Air Force blew
up the odd vital bridge at strategic intervals so that no train ever got through
. But, for the moment, it was
completed and the Japanese decided to open it with ceremony.
At this ceremony the senior British officer on the line was invited to speak. He
refused abruptly, saying that
neither he nor any pris oner of war wished in any way to celebrate the official
opening of a railway line whose
every sleeper on its whole four-hundred-mile length had cost one human life. The
Japanese were in no way
put out.
The I.J.A. were now confronted with the problem of what to do with the wreckages
of humanity which were
the survivors of their railway. These did not look like men; on the other hand,
they were not quite animals.
They had feet torn by bamboo thorns and working for long months without boots. T
heir shins had no spare
flesh at all on the calves and looked as if bullets had exploded inside them, bu
rsting the meat outwards and
blackening it These were their ulcers, of which they had dozens, from threepenny
-bit size upwards, on each
leg. Their thighbones and pelves stood out sharply and on the point of each thig
hbone was that red raw patch
like a saddle sore or monkey's behind. All their ribs showed clearly, the chest
223 sloping backwards to the hollows of throat and collarbone. Arms hung down, s
ticklike> with huge hands,
and the skin wrinkled where muscle had vanished, like old men. Heads were shrunk
en onto skulls with large
teeth and faintly glowing eyes set in black wells: hair was matted and lifeless.
The whole body was draped
with a loose-fitting envelope of thin purple-brown parchment which wrinkled hori
zon tally over the stomach
and chest and vertically on sagging fleshless buttocks.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
That was what the Japanese and Koreans did to the men who went on Forces F and H
and lived. Of the total
number who left Singapore, about half had survived. Now, what to do with this wr
eckage? And when they
looked at it, even the Nips were a little unnerved.
The first thing they did, therefore, was to collect most of the survivors at Kam
buri that same Kamburi which
had been the last town before the jungle commenced on our march up. We were load
ed onto trains and
shipped down. There were several longish stops on the way to allow those who die
d to be buried.
Finally we steamed into the flat fields of Kamburi.
As I staggered off the train, cramped and ravenous, for we had had no food for t
wo days, I noticed that beside
the line ran long rows of huts separated into two areas. In the one were white m
en: in the other black men.
Both lots looked shocking. The fence that marked the dividing line between railw
ay and camp was draped
with white men only. The natives no longer took any interest in anything. Therei
n lay the difference. And, as I
shambled towards this fence, one of the men on the other side crawled under it,
dragged me through and
greeted me with a warmth I had forgotten existed. It was Harry Witherford. I man
aged a feeble crack "How's
your turbo-jet?" I asked but I was a bit overwhelmed. But he, good soul, knew wh
at was required. Leading me
firmly round the back of a hut, he gave me bananas and boiled eggs bought on the
spot from a Thai-which I
devoured frantically lest they vanish. Though I live to be a thousand the warmth
of that greeting and the gift
of that food after the sterile months of want that had gone before will never le
ave me.
We moved into the huts. They had a raised platform on each side of a centre aisl
e as our numbers increased so
the amount of this platform available to one became steadily less. It was mathem
atical. Eventually we had
nineteen inches a man and a line of men cross wise at our feet. Nineteen inches
is not enough for a man. To
this the Japs pointed out that many died each day soon there would be more room.
In this, it seemed, there was
great truth, because the day did not seem to pass when twenty men were not burie
d.
Ulcers were the main problem. They were attacked at once. Whilst Fagan operated
all day on a bamboo table
in a small cubicle kept free of flies by mosquito net (he cleaned out or amputat
ed as many as forty legs a day,
and always there was that gentle smile and the specialist's considerate manner),
orderlies and volunteers,
armed with common or garden spoons, which were sterilized in boiling water, clea
ned out every ulcer in the
camp at least once a day. The heroism of those men whose legs were so scooped de
an the flesh pared out like
flesh from a n^elon was incredible. It was not as if, once done, it was finished
. There was invariably the next
day. And the next day there was never any improvement. But always, when his turn
came, each man would
stretch his leg out flat for the orderly, raise himself slightly on his forearm
and elbow and, with a friend ready
to grab each shoulder should he move, say:
"O.K., mate, give her the works."
Then the orderly would dig his spoon firmly into the stinking pus until he had r
eadied firm flesh and, having
reached it, draw the spoon carefully down one side of the gaping wound and up th
e other. Swab it out: scoop
out the few remaining mortified patches: put a bit of canvas soaked in acriflavi
ne over the top and bind it up.
Finished till tomorrow. The patient, who had lain straining rigidly backwards an
d not moving nor uttering
more than a few small grunts, would then relax and crumple backwards, his forehe
ad sweaty.
I cannot adequately describe the courage of those men because, having only suffe
red a few small ulcers
myself, I shall never know the pain they bore so stoically. Let me hasten to sta
te, however, that although I
clung firmly to a bamboo upright for support I never once had the small craters
round my ankle bones
scooped clean with that fearsome spoon without either being sick, or fainting, o
r both. And had it not been for
shame at the silence of those others, with the flesh from their knees to their a
nkles laid bare and their rigid
straining backwards, I would have screamed with terror and with pain.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
So the day commenced. Next, the night's dead were collected from each ward and t
aken, in convoy, outside
the camp and across the road to be buried. It was difficult not to count them ea
ch day: but counting them was
depressing, and if one did succumb to the temp tation, one pretended one hadn t.

After that the day was one's own, for there was no work to do. If one could walk
, one went looking for
friends: if not one lay hoping that some friends would come along instead.
All day long a brisk trade was done with the Thais clothes being the main articl
es for sale. As soon as the sale
was made, the cash was used to buy eggs or fruit pomelos and limes. The camp aut
horities the British ones
were timid about this black-marketeering and forbade it, but we did not think th
ey were serious.
In this, however, we were mistaken. I had just concluded a most satisfactory pie
ce of haggling with a Thai
through the back of the latrine so deep in maggots that no guard would ever drea
m of coming near it when an
officer arrested me.
He claimed that I was endangering the camp's safety. I replied tersely: (a) that
I was not; (b) that I was selling
the trousers of a man who could no longer walk; who, therefore, did not need tro
users; but who greatly desired
pomelos and eggs because he could no longer stomach rice: and (c) that I never g
ot caught anyway.
He replied that he had just caught me.
I told him that one did not expect to have to look out for one's own officers ex
actly as one did Japanese
guards. He looked uncomfortable and said he had his orders from the colonel. I s
aid rude things about the
colonel. Five minutes later I was marched down for an orderly-room charge.
"Where's your hat, Gunner?" asked an R.S.M., who knew as well as I did that I ha
dn't owned a hat for two
years which fact I pointed out to him,
"Get a hat," he ordered. So I wandered off, and when I returned with a hat on, I
was called to attention,
right-turned, quick-marched, left-right-left-righted and called to a halt. To al
l of this nonsense I paid not much
attention, being preoccupied at the time with plans for selling my own shirt nex
t morning.
I was then ordered to remove my hat.
"But I only just got the ruddy thing," I complained. Apparently, however, that i
s exactly why one has a hat for
orderly-room charges so that one may be ordered to remove it lest one should str
ike the presiding officer with
it.
"Wouldn't it," I asked, "be easier not to have a hat in the first place? Then yo
u couldn't hit him whether you
felt like it or not." I was instructed not to be flippant and, after some absurd
ly superfluous questions about my
name had been asked, the charge was read out. If I had murdered a hundred or so
of my comrades in their
sleep, it could hardly have sounded worse.
Asked if I had anything to say, I replied that if the court had not as yet appre
ciated that our diet as O.R,'s
required supplementing, if we were to continue to live, I hoped that someday it
would. The court then found
me guilty of the hideous charge it had heard and fined me a dollar and a half, w
hich I did not have. I said so,
and was instructed to pay it within the week presumably by selling something on
the black market.
As I left the "court," an officer, Pockley by name, grabbed me. "What did they f
ine you?" he demanded
fiercely. I told him a dollar and a half, "Fools. Bloody fools," he shouted and,
thrusting two dollars into my
hand, added: "Here, go and pay them off."
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
I walked back into the hut which was the "court" and plonked down the two dollar
s. Great excitement, and
everyone on the "bench" wrote things on various bits of paper. I stood silently
and watched. Finally, one of
my judges spoke. "All right, Gunner," he said, glancing up impatiently, "what ar
e you waiting for?"
"My fifty cents," I replied. Irritably it was handed over--five tin-like coins w
ith holes in the centre. Still I
stood my ground.
"Well, what is it now?" snapped the Court.
"My hat," I replied.
"Oh yes," said someone sheepishly, and produced the potentially lethal headgear.
I then left and outside met
Pockley again.
"O.K.?" he asked.
"Fine, thanks, Dick," I told him, "here's your fifty cents change."
"Keep it, man," he said, "buy yourself an egg," and limped off on his badly ulce
red leg to his own hut.
So I bought an eg and took it back to my hut along with Exhibit A, the pants. I
sat down on the "chung" 2
beside the man who owned the pants and told him the story in mixed German and Ma
lay, for he was an
Amboinese soldier of the Netherland Forces and they were our only common languag
es.
"Aber ich harm nicht Rice essen" he said. "I can't eat rice."
I said I was sorry. I would try to sell his trousers the next morning and buy hi
m pomelos.
"Ja? he said eagerly. "Pomelos sehr gut" and, in case I hadn't understood, added
, "banya bagus"
Next morning I limped over to his bed space and found an orderly rolling up the
trousers, and the space
empty, and on the floor a broken egg.
"What happened to Joe?" I asked.
"Died last night, chum."
"What of?" I asked.
"Starvation, the M.O. said, chum. He hadn't eaten anything for a week, you know.
" As I walked away, I was
very angry not because the orders themselves were so silly but because they were
applied with such silly
rigidity.
Hugh and Harry I found quite early Hugh obviously on the mend, though fearfully
torn by the fires of cholera:
Harry, equally obviously, doomed. Hugh and I spent quite a lot of time with him,
but his bowels kept failing
him, and we were never sure that our presence wasn't more of an embarrassment th
an anything else.
Finally, however, he sent for us. Hugh was on a hut-sweeping fatigue, so I went
down to the dysentery hut
where Harry lay. In the callous necessarily callous fashion of those days, he ha
d been laid on the floor
because, in his extremes as he was now, he was constantly fouling himself and on
the floor it didn't matter.
When two hundred men evacuate about forty times a day each and there are only tw
o orderlies with half a
dozen crude half-bamboo bed-* pans ("boats" they are called), to cope with that
day's eight thou sand calls, it
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
can readily be seen that no care should be wasted on a man who is dying. So Harr
y lay on the floor, a
wizened-up little heap of rag with two clawlike hands and a tuft of dirty hair o
n his head.
I knelt beside him.
"How are you doing, Harry?" I asked.
"Won't be long now, Dig," he replied weakly, but steadily.
"Don't come that on me," I argued, "you've got too much to do back home."
"No, lad, no," he said, "I'm on the floor. I know what that is. I'm finished. La
ke you say, Russ, it doesn't
matter. So long as I'm not alone, I don't care."
I tried to rouse him. "Sell you a cup of coffee for a dollar," I said. He knew w
hat I was up to. He turned his
grotesque head with its tuft of dirty hair and grinned. For a fraction of a seco
nd the eyes were Harry's again as
he grabbed my hand in his two claws. Then they dimmed again, bluish-glazed like
a newborn pup's.
"Just so long as I'm not alone, I don't care any longer," he said.
"You're right, Pommy," I told him, "you won't be alone."
I needn't have worried, though. Hary had already gone where all good shopkeepers
go.
Kamburi turned out to be a hotbed of M.T. malaria M.T. stands for Malignant Tert
ian and wreaks fearful
havoc among sick men who are not safeguarded with nets and quinine. The death ro
ll, which had been
slackening slightly, speeded up again under the stimulus of M.T. malaria.
As was inevitable, my turn came and I found myself too weary with fever to move,
or eat. Hugh was a tower
of strength. He collected cupfuls of water and washed me. He fed me my rice unti
l I was sick. He did
everything possible until I got so hot that I no longer knew whether anything wa
s being done for me or not.
Instead I thought I read a book. A book I had written myself full of sonorous ph
rases and magnificent
sentences. It was a most excellent book, except that it made no sense, and when
I reached out my hand to turn
over the page it was not there.
When that happened I would return to reality but only for a second. Then I was o
ff again, reading. A hundred
times I reached out to turn pages. And a hundred times I awoke with a jerk to th
e truth of Kamburi. But the
book always won--until one night I was very hot and my mother came to put cool c
loths on my head. I knew
she should not be there, but when I argued, she just laughed and called gently a
nd my sister also appeared.
Now I was in trouble. Both my mother and sister in Kamburi! All night I led them
between huts and behind
trees and across streams particularly streams: how cool they were using all the
skill in outwitting the Japanese
that the last two years had taught me. And, at the last moment, we found a small
boat. I handed them into it,
and they sat down. As they sat a guard leapt upon me, seizing my wrist: so, with
one kick, I shoved the boat
out into the stream and it rushed quickly away with the tide, with my mother and
sister sitting quite still facing
me, dry-eyed, and the dog jumping up and down asking for its ball to be thrown.
The grip on my wrist tightened and so, confident that they were safe, I turned t
o deal with my assailant. "It's
M.T.," I heard a voice say, "he's not too good. Give him some of that atabrine o
r we'll have another cerebral
case on our hands," and another voice said: "Pulse is fast," and the grip on my
wrist vanished.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Cerebral malaria. The noise like baboons, only it was men. That dispelled all my
dreams. From that moment I
ate everything and eagerly awaited my half tablet of the precious atabrine a day
and went to sleep only
grudgingly lest my control of consciousness should slip again. I did not want to
shout like a baboon.
A few days later it was all finished.
"You're a bright one," said Hugh with a grin, "silly as a two-bob watch you were
." And when I asked how I'd
managed to get so much medical attention, he explained that Dick Pockley and The
o Walker had badgered the
doctors until they came to me. The longer one lived, it seemed, the greater the
number of generous people one
met.
The Indians in the camp next door, meantime, died like flies and were buried as,
or just before, they died in
huge communal graves. Those who had ulcers were unceremoniously bundled into a s
pecial charnel hut and
there locked in to starve to death. These, especially, were unhappy and noisy.
Their lot being a sad one and they not blessed with the moral fibre to stand up
against difficulties, they
decided, in droves, not to endure it any longer. So when they heard the train co
ming up the track, they would
rush out and lay their necks across the line. This effectively solved their prob
lems but would stop the train if
there were too many of them because the wheels became slippery. The habit attrac
ted hosts of vultures from
the district all around and these lived in the trees in our camp. They are loath
some birds.
One day, as we carried out the body of a youngster who had died the night before
, one of these vultures
swooped and tore at its chest. We were too quick for it though, dropping the bod
y as the bird swept down so
that it missed on its run-in with its curved, tearing beak. But we hated it, the
four of us who carried the boy,
for daring to attack him. So we picked up stones and sticks and followed the vul
ture to its tree near the fence
that divided the camp from the line. Then we hurled the stones and sticks at it,
and, one of our number being
an American sailor off the Houston, and a baseball pitcher as well, hit the bird
, which came shrieking and
tumbling down.
"What'll we do with it?" I asked.
"Eat the bastard," retorted the Yank. And within a half hour it was stripped, bo
iled and eaten. The tables, I
felt, as far as that vulture was concerned, had definitely been turned.
The dysentery huts rang to the urgent shout of "Orderly, Orderly. Bring the *boa
t* pleasel" and a few seconds
later: Too late. ,. bring the shovel." The beriberi ward grew steadily more and
more crowded with bodies that
bloated first and then drowned and the ulcer sufferers went through the daily or
deal of the spoon, and the
scoured flesh always refused to granulate and heal (although now that the Japs h
ad been persuaded to donate a
little M and B 693 and some iodoform as well, there seemed more hope). Fagan con
tinued to operate up to
forty times a day. Then a new scourge hit the sick men of KamburL
On that red raw patch over the thighbones where they lay on their sides, the fle
sh first mortified and then
swiftly developed into an abscess. In a matter of days this abscess swelled till
it covered the whole thighbig
and deep as half a football. It had to be opened and drained, and for so swift a
n incision, albeit so agonizing,
the camp could not spare any chloroform. Not while there were so many amputation
s waiting. So each day
they were done, the abscess suf ferers, without anaesthetic. A swift stab, a moa
n, a gushing and drip ping into
a kidney bowl and on to the next man.
That sharp moan hurt to hear.
In the camp was a Dutchman called Elser. Small, dark, with curly hair and round
eyes behind thick glasses.
He spoke bad English and was at the same time both nondescript and arrogant. He
was a hypnotist.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
One day he sought, and obtained, permission to use hypnosis on the Dutch cases w
hose abcesses were that
day to be lanced. His technique was brilliant and the Dutcha superstitious race
were most susceptible. One
after the other, as he passed, each man fell backwards onto the chung in deep, h
ypnotic sleep. And one after
the other their abcesses were lanced. In the whole ward there was not one of tho
se sharp moans that hurt to
hear. It was a miracle.
I had never been readier to admire a man in all my life. But I did not admire El
ser. He came out of the ward,
his birdlike face wreathed in smiles of self-satisfaction not because he had sav
ed men from suffering: not
because that sharp moan had been silenced, but because Elser had been glorified.
"They vill vorship me now,
those men," he said, "because my vill is stronger as theirs." I must have looked
my contempt.
"So," he repeated, "is right. My mind," and he tapped his fore head at the side
of his big glasses, "is stronger
as theirs."
"Than theirs," I observed.
"Ja naturlicht-fhsLQ. theirs," he amended.
"l doubt both statements anyway. It's very sad," I told him, and walked away.
"Wast" I heard him shouting. "Was ist?" but I ignored him. Elser, I knew, would
not trouble to save Kamburi
any more pain. And, in fact, he didn't. The miracle of the abcess ward was never
repeated and the following
year Elser himself, the man with the strongest mind in Thailand, achieved the as
tounding and unequalled feat
of contracting scabies, falling into a decline of misery thereat, and dying.
Volunteers were requested for duties as medical orderlies. Only knowledge necess
ary how to empty a bedpan
or boat Tired of being useless and bedridden, I handed in my name. I thus entere
d the strange world of people
who stay awake at night and watch while others sleep and die.
It was a little eerie, that night duty, with only a small coconutoil wick for li
ght in a fifty-metre hut. It was also
touching. The grati tude of men for a drag upwards as they tried to rise, or a r
estraining arm as they fell back
too quickly. The supreme pathos of two hun dred dying men who, relaxed and unsel
f -conscious in their sleep,
looked like children when the oil got very low and the light very dim, like babi
es. The whispered "Thanks,
mate," when you took them a boat. The offers of a cigarette because they had not
hing else to giveand even
that they had been given. They were good lads.
For a while it worried me that some of those who died should do so asleep and wi
thout warning they seemed
so unprepared. But then when I saw those who knew exactly what was happening and
lay patiently waiting to
die for hours: and when they, too, saw no heavenly hosts nor had any comforting
visions (of the type much
vaunted by priests) but had only their own courage and humour to bear them over
those last minutes then I
ceased to worry about those who died in their sleep. They did not have to face t
his waking wait, with its
prospect of oblivion. I felt happier about those who died in their sleep so long
as I found them before the cold
stiffness of death had set their legs and arms in the careless, childlike postur
e of their last sleeping moment
(seldom suitable to a dignified burial).
I learnt to undress the dead, tidy up their belongings, straighten their legs, f
old their hands across their chests,
close their eyes. If the lids were reluctant to shut, a little cold water on a p
iece of cloth, and, after a few
seconds, the eyes were closed and peaceful. AH this and much else I learnt even
to dressings, so long as they
in volved the patient in no pain, in which case I felt sick. Most impor tant of
all, I learned to sit on the edge of
the chung near any man who couldn't sleep and, while I waited for the next hoars
e urgent whisper of
"Orderly... boat, please," to talk with him about those sudden thoughts that com
e at night to men who are far
from home. Voices low-pitched, sporadic phrases and long, companion able silence
s. It was some comfort
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
that the war had at least taught me to like my fellow men and that, for all of u
s, there was more than a little to
be said.
Rosie-the bombardier-solicitor of the slide rule, the carefully con sidered answ
ers, the seasick pills and the
cutthroat razor Rosie died. And shortly after him, Robbie, Piddington's rickshaw
mate. But Rob bie had
almost a hundred boils and, though he smiled cheerfully all the time, his releas
e from them must have been a
mercy. All the threads with the past seemed to be snapping. There was, of course
, no future. No one with any
intelligence allowed himself in those days to contemplate the future.
In Kamburi water was always the difficulty. When it rained every one crawled out
and stood or lay under the
pouring eaves of the huts and scrubbed themselves clean. But when it didn't rain
, then even to get enough
water to drink was a problem.
It was in this matter that a small group of officers started and carried out (al
ways more difficult) a most
generous scheme. Playfair, Le Maistre-Walker, Mackissack, MacLeod, Knox, PocHey
and Gibson (there were
others, doubtless, whose names I forget) col lected a basin and a kerosene tin.
They would fill the basin with
clean, clear water collected from the well some distance outside the camp. Then
they would send one of their
number up to one of the huts and he would select someone to whom he would say: "
There's a tub of water for
you down at our hut if you want it," and that was all. When you went down to the
hut, tiie basin stood outside
with a small piece of soap. No one there. No questions asked. It was restoring,
that free bath, after days of
sweating with fever and parching heat.
Nor did the group stop there. With their limited officers allow ance, they made
gifts of fruit, eggs and money
usually when one slept, so that one awoke to find it there beside one. They drop
ped in to each hut almost
every day, each one of them, to yarn and see how things went They pestered the h
ard-pressed medical staff if
they saw a case that needed attention.
Let it be said here and now that almost all of us had experience of such groups
and that without them things
would have gone very hard indeed.
Not only these officers, however, understood the value of water. My duties as a
night orderly were abruptly
terminated by a second attack of M.T. malaria in the course of which I returned
to my "book reading" with
renewed vigour, not even the absence of a page to turn, as I reached out for it,
bringing me back to my senses.
At that time Kamburi had had a rainless week. Water was at a premium. I needed g
allons of it.
One day I became aware of the soft clang of a mug against tin, then the splashin
g of water. At 2rst I thought
this noise, so close to my head, was as non-existent as my "book." But finally,
unable to stand it any longer, I
turned my head and looked.
There, in the aisle between the two chungs, stood an Australian- Snowy, we calle
d him. In his right hand he
held a four-gallon can of water: in his left a mug, which he constantly filled a
nd poured slowly back into the
can, filled and poured back.
"Want a drink, mate?" he asked. I explained to him that if I had to choose betwe
en a bagful of diamonds and a
drink of water at that stage, Td take the drink He grinned understandingly.
"Give us your mug then," he said. I struggled upright and found my mug in amongs
t Mein Kampf and all the
other junk. He dipped his own mug into the water... cool, it looked... and held
it over mine, ready to pour. My
tongue curled dryly, like a roll of sandpaper, back against the roof of my mouth
. Then:
"Got ten cents on you, mate?" Snowy suddenly asked.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Got what?" I asked, my mind still on the water.
Ten cents," said Snowy. And, as I looked uncomprehendingly at him, added: "It's
ten cents a mug, you know "
He looked at me shrewdly, his eyes hard as I rebelled at the thought He poured t
he water slowly back into the
can. "Only ten cents a mug," he said, "if's worth it. You're thirsty, ain't you?
"
"You know I'm thirsty," I told him, "else you wouldn't bejstand-ing there pourin
g that water in and out of your
blasted can."
Take it or leave it, mate," he said. "Ten cents ain't much and a man's gotta liv
e. I mean I gotta get dough for a
smoke somehow, ain't I?"
"I haven't got ten cents," I told him, which was true, "so shove off." I lay bac
k again and tried to think about
lemons which, I'd read somewhere once, was a very thirst-quenching thought. The
water splashed, a long slow
trickle again, just behind my head.
"You could give me an I.O.U., mate," the flat nasal voice urged. "I got one here
. All you gotta do is sign."
"I haven't got a pencil," I said. I was struggling against the temptation of thi
s usury. I didn't want any part of
it. Except the water. And Snowy knew that; and he knew he had me because he'd ca
ught so many hundreds of
fever and cholera sufferers before me.
"I gotta pencil," he said, "indelible," and thrust onto my chest a grubby form a
nd a pencil. I read the form:
I the undersigned hereby promise to pay on demand the sum of 10 cents or upon th
e return to Australia 1 (one
pound).
Signed
One pound for a mug of water.
"Snowy," I told him, "youre a good businessman," and signed. He replied: "Thanks
, mate, one pint of misuwa
3 coming up." He took his pencil and I.O.U. and passed me my mug. I drank deeply
and felt better.
Altogether, during that rainless period and my high fever, I bought, or Snowy ma
naged to sell me, 112 worth
of water.
When, two years later, I got back to Australia, one of the first letters I recei
ved was a demand for 112. I wrote
Snowy a polite note saying that I should be enchanted to pay him, every penny of
it, so long as he would meet
me in Sydney where we might both be photographed by the press -- I giving him a
cheque for 112, he handing
me a receipt for 112 money paid for water received. I thought that as a tale of
comradeship in arms it would
read well in the dailies.
Surprisingly, I received no answer.
I had just recovered from this latest bout of fever when into the hut strode Ter
ai a Terai resplendent not in the
usual rather drab I.J.A. interpreter's uniform, but in a dove-grey tunic and bre
eches and glittering black boots
to his knees and his hand on his sword. I had seen other Japanese officers weari
ng this uniform, but they had
been members o the Kempe-Tai not pro-British war haters as Terai was thought to
be.
"Hello, Mr. Braddon," he said, "I am glad to see you again. But you are still so
yellow and thin."
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Still got malaria," I told him.
"Ah so-ka," he agreed, "I am sorry," Then, more cheerfully, "I have finished my
play."
"Good stuff," I told him. "Got it there?"
"Yes," he said, digging into his dove-grey tunic and dragging out a roll of type
script, "There it is. You will
read it and tell me your criticism." I nodded. "I will return tomorrow," he said
, and, with a smile, left. "Christ,"
said my neighbour, "who was that... Hirohito?" I said: "No, just an interpreter.
"
Slowly I unrolled the neat typescript. Strange bloke, this Terai. Pro-British, s
ome said. Got violin strings
which were scarce as all hell for the Concert Party; but couldn't ever get quini
ne, of which there was tons, for
the railway workers. Went to a lot of trouble to keep you informed about your fr
iends in other camps; then
spent days trying to trick you into admitting that you got news from an illicit
radio. A professor of English
classics who pressed on you booklets about Bushido and the art of arranging flow
ers.
I skipped the title page and the cast list, my eye flying direct to the introduc
tion. It observed that British,
American and Dutch prisoners of war had worked with Nippon on the glorious proje
ct of the Thailand
Railway. By completing it, they had both atoned for the accumulated sins of thei
r forefathers in the East and
had imbibed sufficient culture from their guards to raise themselves onto an alt
ogether higher spiritual plane.
I grunted at that. Either this Terai was the most superb satirist of Japanese pr
opaganda or he was the most
fanatical and cunning purveyor of it. I started on the play itself.
An hour later, with difficulty, I finished it The dialogue was hope less: the En
glish poor: the plot fatuous. It
concerned Allied P.O.W,'s who, after working with a noble Japanese guard on the
railway, became convinced
that the Japanese way of life was quite the best and the British way of life qui
te the worst. It was a very bad
play.
Mr. Terai arrived next day and I was no longer in any doubt about him even thoug
h this time he wore his
colourless interpre ter's uniform and looked quite gentle and innocuous.
"You have read my play, Mr. Braddon?" he asked. I nodded.
"And...?" he queried.
"Lousy," I told him--and enjoyed it
"Lousy, Mr. Braddon?" His face was questioning, although a glimmer of angry unde
rstanding lurked in his
eyes.
"Yes, Mr. Terai. Lousy! Warm, tidak bagus, Number Ten," I elucidated in all the
other languages, including
his own, that he was likely to understand. I held out the rolled typescript and,
with carefully suppressed fury,
he took it... slowly.
"Nothing personal, of course, Mr. Terai," I added, sweetly.
"Of course not, Mr. Braddon. I am most interested in your views," he said, "most
interested," and left.
I didn't see Terai ever again: but when the war ended with Japan's unconditional
surrender, he was, I am told,
one of the lamentably few who obeyed the Nipponese injunction never to be captur
ed alive. He attempted
hara-kiri-- which was an odd thing for a man who was pro-British and anti-war to
do.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
As the weeks rolled on at Kamburi the incredible mental resilience of the men wh
o lay there reasserted itself.
They were rotten with ulcers, heavy with beriberi, torn with dysentery and fever
, yet slowly the haunting
numbness of the past year vanished from their eyes and the future came to have s
ome meaning.
And one night the best night I remember in Thailand quite late, the Pommies in t
he next hut, without warning,
suddenly started singing. Not just one, but the lot. Good, clear, young voices.
Young that was it. It was the
first time for many months that it had oc curred to me that we who looked wizene
d enough to be a thousand
were still young. They sang the inevitable chorus in their warm men's voices:
"There's a long, long trail a-winding, Into the land of my dreams..."
and, when they finished that and in the silence you could hear every man in the
camp listening they swung by
some strange mass instinct, with barely a second's hesitation, into:
"When they sound the last all-clear,
How happy, my darling, 111 be..."
and at that the next hutful of Pommies joined in with them, and the next with th
ose, and the worst of Thailand
was over.
Thereafter there were nightly singsongs and quizzes and lectures. Entertainers b
ecame popular and names like
Bill Williams and "Professor" Roberts will always be remembered. Bill Williams h
ad a tiny portable organ.
This he would cart into the centre of one of the huts and there, squatting on a
box, he would pedal furiously
and sing cabaret numbers to men who died, and shouted, "Orderly, boat, please...
too late... bring the shovel,"
and lay bloated or raddled listening to him. He was a delightful artist. To the
ac companiment of his boogie
and point numbers men forgot their ulcers and straining bowels. When he plays hi
s point numbers now adays
in the luxurious floor show at the Berkeley Hotel in the West End of London I wo
nder how often his mind
goes back to the days when those same fingers, that same indolent voice, that sa
me wide smile enchanted the
shattered men of Kamburi. Bill Williams was very much a vital part of those mad
days and nights.
And then, suddenly, on one of them, the Japanese said: "All men go to Singapore,
" and without the smallest
compunction we got in trains and left the vultures and graves of flat, mosquito-
infested Kamburi. Not even the
vile five days that followed in that train could dampen our pleasure because now
at last we were going home
and nothing could ever, after Thailand, be bad again.
1 A HOME TO BE BUILT
The trip down, like the trip up, was tedious. Towards its conclusion, as the tra
in chugged onto the Johore end
of the causeway (where a very inadequate crater bore witness to the feeble attem
pt at blowing it made years
before in the face of the Japanese advance), a shout went up, as it had last tim
e we crossed the causeway.
"You'll never get off the island," the shout went, and very ironic the shout was
.
From Singapore station we were transported in trucks, trucks noticeably the wors
e for wear in the last year, to
Sime Road where once there had been a golf course and now there was a camp.
At Sime Road we stayed for several months, recuperating and licking our wounds.
Nothing much happened at
Sime Road. General Saito, who commanded us, ordered that all men should be able
to count up to one
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
hundred in Japanese and that all orders on parade should be in the same barbaric
language. Whenever he or
his aide, Lieutenant Takahashi, appeared, we were all to shout "Kirratf and stan
d up to attention and salute.
Saito and Takahashi frequently did the rounds of the camp to enforce this rule.
They and Saito's pet monkey
on a leash became quite familiar signs to us, though, of the three, the only one
we liked was the monkey.
Then one day the monkey on its leash leapt round the corner of a hut and the fir
st occupant who spotted it
shouted, TQrray," realizing that Saito and Takahashi would be dose behind. But,
as the whole hut stood up
and saluted, Saito and Takahashi were not dose behind. They were, in fact, stand
ing on the crest of a hill a
hundred yards away. And what they saw was block after block of prisoners of war
screaming "Kirray" and
saluting a monkey as it bounded down the lines. The implication was unmistakable
. There is no sub ject on
which the Nip is more sensitive. That night Saito chopped his pet monkey's head
off with his large Samurai
sword and next morning Tafcahashi issued an order that any otter pet monkeys in
the camp were to be
destroyed.
The next event of significance was the collapse of Kevin Fagan. Exhausted by fev
er and a year's superhuman
effort on behalf of others, he suddenly folded up. It was a brilliant morning th
at the story flashed round the
paths and slopes and huts of Sime Road Camp. "Pagan's ill, unconscious, they say
he's dying."
And, if any proof were needed, that moment decided the great ness of the faith t
hat the men of the railway had
in the slim, greying M.O. To the fibro-cement room where he lay, from all over t
he camp, came an endless
pilgrimage of soldiers bearing tinned food, money, oil, soap, clothes, all their
most cherished possessions.
"Brought this for the major," they would say, "thought it might help," and then
wander off. No other man in
the entire Malayan Force could have won so spontaneous a tribute of such treasur
es.
For days his progress was followed with even closer attention than the B.B.C. ne
ws. When it was announced
on parade that he was off the D.I. List, the ranks of men rumbled with pleasure.
When he was first seen up and
walking again, the camp gazed proudly upon him as a hospital does upon its star
patient In the light of the
total and inexplicable absence of official recognition, since the war ended, of
his devotion to his men and his
selfless courage to help them, it is pleasant to recollect that at Sime Road, wh
en he fell ill, we were at least
able to pay a small part of the tribute so long owed him.
The final event of importance at Sime Road was mail from home. It had come throu
gh the Red Cross and was
sixteen months old. But it was from home. Hugh and I both received our first let
ters. Mine came from my
sister. It said:
Dear Russ,
Mum's puddings are still as lumpy as ever. Oodles of love from us all.
Pat
I read it over and over. If twenty-five words was all the Japanese would allow o
ur folk to write, then that letter
told me all I wanted to know that the family did not accept that I was Tolled,'
as posted: that the old household
jokes about my mother's rather abandoned cooking still flourished: that home was
still home.
A lean figure leant disconsolately against a post opposite me.
"No mail, Dig?" I asked.
"Nope."
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"Like to read this?* I offered, as casually as possible because I knew the hurt
that came when you missed out
on the Red Cross mail, which arrived only once a year.
"Do you mind?" he asked. I waggled my head from side to side. "Don't mind if I d
o," he said cautiously, so I
passed him the card and, as he accepted it, he said: "Ta."
He looked at the address, at the Japanese frank, at the colour of the ink. Then,
very carefully, he read it. And
then again. After about ten minutes he handed it back.
" Oodles of love,"* he said, "that's nice. That's a nice letter" A pause for tho
ught and then: "Pat's your sister, is
she?* I nodded.
"What's your mother like?" he asked. I said tall and good fun, but a lousy cook.

"Thought from that she might be," he laughed. "My old woman is too. Trouble is,
she don't know it like
yours." For a few moments there was silence, then he said: "111 get one one day,
mate, don't you worry. I had
a baby coming just when Singapore chucked it in. Got to find out whether it's a
boy or a girl yet"
"Fussy?" I asked.
"Aw," he said, "I reckon I like me teapots with a spout on em." He stood up stra
ight from the post and strolled
off. After a few yards he turned and shouted back: "Thanks, mate, do the same fo
r you sometime. *
Quite soon after that we were informed that all P.O.W,'s on Singa pore were to b
e concentrated inside Changi
Gaol. Once again we prepared to move. At least, we felt, we would meet a lot of
friends.
So, at Changi Gaol, were concentrated about seven thousand men the remnants of F
and H Forces, the
workers of Changi Aerodrome, the Changi Administration.
The gaol from the outside was tall and grey and its barred win dows had a blind,
un-looked-out-of expression.
Its walls breathed isolation and sterile retribution. It was said to be modelled
on Alcatraz, only better. It was
the sort of building the very sight of which was so unnerving as to make one res
olve never to break laws.
Once inside, one realized the skill with which its architects had combined human
itarian principles of
accommodation with an atmosphere so oppressively penal as to deter all but the m
ost anti-social.
And once inside, one knew why the barred windows looked blind and un-looked-out-
of from the outside.
They were un-looked-out-of. They were so placed that they admitted light and air
but they were too high for
their inmates to see from within the free world beyond the walls.
And once inside, one appreciated the sinister envelope of the gaol's double wall
s. Like a layer of specially
thick insulation, these two walls, and between them the girdle road, which ran r
ight round the four sides of the
gaol, isolated the gaol community from the world beyond. They cut off all hope o
f escape both to the convict
and to the prisoner of war.
This, then, was the position. Changi Gaol was one of His Majesty's most modern p
risons, proudly surmounted
by a gleaming concrete tower, which in its turn was surmounted by a radar screen
which did not work, which
in its turn was surmounted by a flagmast bearing the Japanese flag. It had been
designed to hold six hundred
native felons and to cater for their needs with a steam kitchen sup plied by oil
-burning boilers, and latrines
with cisterns. The oil burners no longer worked because there was no oil: the ci
sterns no longer worked
because most such refinements, after a few years of Japanese use, usually don t.

In other words, into a f erro-eoncrete gaol for six hundred, with out sewage or
cooking facilities, on the one
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
day, marched seven thousand men. To transform this ferro-concrete shell into a h
ome they had the following
natural or man-made materials to hand:
Rubber trees
Coconut trees the fruit as well
A few augers
Some steel filing cabinets, removed from Changi Barracks in transit
Palm oil
Bamboo
Barbed wire
An infinite capacity for stealing
Their own inexhaustible imagination
With these materials, and these only for the Japs offered no help they transform
ed the gaol in a few days.
The oil-burning boilers were, by some sapper's miracle, translated into wood-bur
ning boilers and a
wood-cutting party grubbed stumps out of the nearby swamps, split their iron roo
ts into lumps and had fuel
ready for the burning. Thereafter, with a good head of steam up and the RE,'s al
ways had a good head of
steam up the rice for our seven thousand was pressure-cooked in a matter of seco
nds.
At the same time the augers were flung to work a steel tripod twenty feet high,
from the apex of which, hung a
shaft whose nose was a sort of triple shoveL Through the shaft ran a bar and on
each end of the bar three men
pushed... round and round... until that triple-shovel nose or bit at the end of
the shaft was full of clay. Then
haul it out, empty it, and start again. Working in shifts, the holes sank, one a
fter the other, in every gaol
courtyard, forty feet deep. Those were our latrines and, used in rotation, they
never failed in their purpose.
And while hundreds of squads of six men in shifts kept the augers turning; and w
hilst others carted away the
raw red clay that the augers churned, and spread it where gardens were to be pla
nted, or banks made, or
ground levelled: and whilst the woodcutters lugged logs into the cookhouse court
yard for the hungry maw of
the R.E,'s boiler while all this went on, others cut palm fronds and separated t
he bladelike leaves and hung
them over thin sap lings about four feet long. Enough of these, like flat grass
skirts, and one could make a
rainproof roof or wall.
Rubber trees were chopped down for uprights and bamboos for roof supports: and b
arbed wire was
straightened for bindings and its long spikes were shaped into nails. Then, with
attap over and around the
skeleton, huts quickly sprang into being two or three in every courtyard. Huts o
ne hundred metres long, with
earth floors.
So, by sleeping four or five in every cell meant for one: by sleeping on the saf
ety screen that covered the well
on each floor between the cells: by sleeping in the huts, and under the washbasi
ns that didn't work, and in the
corridors, every man found shelter. And, with the bore-holes functioning so perf
ectly, no dysentery epidemic
broke out. And, with the cookhouse producing our rice within a matter of minutes
, no one starved. And the
Japanese who had looked rather sardonic as they herded so huge a number into so
small a space with no
facilitieswere surprised.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
But Changi had not finished yet not by a long chalk. Parties that went out to wo
rk stole lengths of inch-piping
and, with it, showers were installed in each courtyard. And the engineers made t
he taps at the washbasins
work, by some weird magic known only to engi neers.
And, by stripping the hard spine out of the leaf of the palm frond and binding b
unches of these spines
together, birch brooms were made. Shorter lengths were stuck, in harsh, evenly c
lipped tufts, into a wooden
head stuck with pitch torn off the roads and hard brooms of first-class manufact
ured appearance were the
result. Like wise were nail brushes for the doctors and medical orderlies made:
and, with the softer fibre from
the outside of coconuts, soft brooms and toothbrushes.
And with the palm oil and some potash from the boilers, and a complex machine ma
de of empty drums and
stolen pipes, soap was made. A cake of good, soft soap for each man in the gaol,
once a fortnight, to use under
the showers.
And with the grass that grew, and water, and potash, and some trays cut out of t
he filing cabinets, paper was
made to write onvery expensive, high-class paper, as is only to be expected when
it is hand-made!
And with the latex that came out of the rubber trees latex which the Japanese re
garded as useless because the
wicked British Im perialists had destroyed all the coagulant as they retreated w
ith this some planters soled
boots and shoes. They coagulated the latex crudely but effectively by urinating
in it Poor Nippon! A little sand
added to the hardening fluid, and there was a tough sole for a shoe.
With the same material, they devised a means of patching clothes cotton having v
anished from our lives and
of preparing an ad hesive tape for medical dressings.
And with the soft white wood of young rubber trees those who had no boots fashio
ned themselves clogs so
that the gaol's concrete corridors rang to their clip-clop all day and all night
, and one came to recognize one's
friends by their particular note and tempo this especially when, later on, many
men, because of vitamin
deficiencies, became so blind that faces were indistinguishable to them.
Also, there was a workshop where the green filing cabinets were transformed into
dixies and mugs and
spoons. And another work shop where filing cabinets and rubber trees were wrough
t into artificial limbs
beautiful pieces of work which their owners (the hundreds of amputees from Thail
and and Burma) preferred
after the wax to the products given them by a grateful government at home. They
were light and walked
without squeaking and the young craftsmen who made them were happy to modify and
modify until the stump
of the leg fitted snugly and without chafing into the socket of the artificial l
imb.
And one man made a small engraving machine which could be used to inscribe "Role
x Waterproof* on the
back and face of even the cheapest watch so that it became worth thousands of do
llars on the black market
Another man, carefully, patiently, with infinite labour, contrived from nothing
a small hand lathe every piece
in it he made himself. Then, on this lathe, he turned an exquisite chess set in
bone: and General Saito saw it
and demanded it as a present. The man re fused. So General Saito just demanded i
t. The man refused. So Gen
eral Saito suggested that the whole camp might suffer if the man did not give T'
m this exquisite chess set, so
the man gave it to him and used his lathe thereafter only for medical instrument
s and parts of wooden legs and
things that General Saito would not fancy.
Meantime, every floor of the gaol had been equipped with a small coil which, whe
n one pressed a button,
glowed red hot so that ciga rettes (made out of papaya leaves wrapped in pages o
f the Bible) could be lit. The
eternal search for "a light * was thus solved. And every day salt water was coll
ected from nearby Changi
beach which water was boiled down, yielding a few ounces of salt to each gallon
of water, so that the rice
would have flavour and our bodies might replace the fluids lost by sweating.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
And finally, within the earliest days of our occupation, gardens were planted. A
n area of rubber outside the
gaol was sought from and granted bythe now bemused Saito and Takahashi. It was c
leared, terraced and
planted. Wells were dug and pumps were made. Every day and all day an anflike sw
arm of men pumped
water and dug with changkols and tended the long rows of native sweet potato, th
e ubi kaya ("wooden potato,'
or tapioca), the papaya, the bayam. Every drop of urine passed by all seven thou
sand men was carefully
conserved and carted out to these gardens and mixed with the water from the pump
s and poured on by the
endless stream of men. Buckets and cans had to be made the Engineers made them.
The life-giving green
leaves (potato, bayam and araminth bitter and teeth-staining) flourished. Two in
ches a day, they sprang up
under Changi's unflagging care. So the beri beri was kept at bay and blindness w
as contained within the lesser
sphere of dimness.
Such was the background of our own domestic arrangements in Changi Gaol. But, as
they stand, they present
a false picture. For they were only the second theme of our life. The main theme
pre dominating everything
else was the Aerodrome. For this, every day, from the day we arrived, the Japane
se required every fit man.
And thus, in the grey light of each dawn, every fit man marched round the girdle
road between the gaol's
double encasing walls, out the main gate upon which the mark made by the Royal C
rest could still be seen,
though tfcie Japanese had long since removed it down past the gaol, through the
hospital lines, through a half
mile or so of bush (at which time the sky was just growing pink) and then at the
water's edge onto the air strip.
A chaos of narrow-gauge lines from the water's edge, into which tailings were ti
pped from the skips, ran back
to the bitten-out surface of a hill where men worked in thousands, nibbling away
to fill the skips.
That bite out of the hill ran straight as an arrow its whole length, white-faced
like the cliffs at Dover, until the
hill curved and dipped. Then the bite vanished only to start again a few hundred
yards farther on where the
hill rose softly once more out of the marsh. It was four thousand metres long an
d the white day and stone of
that bite into the hill face, along with the pulverized flat of the air strip at
its foot, stretching sideways to the
sea, glared and glittered sullenly in the unending heat The thousands of men who
worked there day after day,
all week and every week, were black with the sun and this mirrored glare.
So, while the men who could work slaved down on this aero drome, those who could
n't stayed in Changi Gaol
digging bore holes, making brooms, growing gardens (these outside the gaol as we
ll), grubbing wood and
dragging it to the cookhouse, building, scrubbing and sweeping.
Nineteen hundred and forty-two may have been the phony captiv ity, and the admin
istration may have been
maddeningly unrealistic in its approach and manner. But 1944 though frequently s
till maddening as to manner
(but what authority, at times, isn t?) 1944 saw our administrative officers do a
magnificent job. The Japs were
kept quiet without our people appearing conciliatory: the labour avail able for
domestic use was employed
with incredible economy and efficiency: the whole gaol energy was devoted to the
realities of the situation
and to overcoming them as ingeniously and swiftly as pos sible. Changi Gaol in t
hat year was a triumph of
improvisation and pulling together even the men dying in the hospital huts sat o
n their chungs with a heap of
palm fronds and tore out spines for brushes, or separated the leaves for attap,
or plaited them for screens to be
placed round showers, urinals and latrines.
For the thousandth time in my captivity, I felt pride in my fellow men.
A third theme that went to make up the Changi Symphony was the existence and mai
ntenance of radios.
These the Japanese still frowned upon. On the subject of B.B.C. news both Takaha
shi and Saito could,
through our interpreters, for they denied that they spoke or understood English,
wax most vehement On the
other hand, the demand of seven thousand men for news, instant, up-to-the-minute
, fully detailed and reliable
news, was clamorous and not to be denied. Thus, when, in Sime Road, the British
administration did once
deny us news on some quaint pretext of security or old-womanish caution a group
of O.R,'S, headed by a
Canadian called Thompson (who had been head of Ford Motors in Singapore) and an
Aus tralian called Wall,
made themselves a "pirate" set This set, created out of parts stolen from Japane
se trucks and all the technical
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
skill of all Thompson's friends, quickly sprang to life. Once more we re ceived
our news. In a Pacific
island-hopping war, as it was at that moment, news was vital to our peace of min
d. When it did come we
found, as had been suspected, that the meagre snippets of in formation being pas
sed on to us at that time by
our command were all about a month old. Very irritating.
Command, upon realizing that we had up-to-the-minute news, uttered fearsome thre
ats, demanded the instant
surrender of the set and in the meantime outlawed it. This caused much merry lau
ghter among the men
concerned and Thompson, Wall & Co. carried on regardless. Not only were they not
discovered, but
eventually, when command's radio unexpectedly died on them, they became the sole
source of news. They
were, therefore, hurriedly, though tacitly, un banned; the fearsome threats were
swallowed and the outlaw be
came the fair-haired boy.
Similarly in Selarang and Roberts and all the other areas that went to make up t
he seven thousand who finally
thronged Changi Gaol. And when they did throng Changi Gaol, they all brought the
ir radios. It then depended
upon whom of the various commanders the fickle Saito, advised by the unpredictab
le Takahashi, would
appoint as gaol commander. If it were the Sime Road CO., then the Sime Road radi
o would become the
official one: all the others pirates. * If it were the Australian C.O., then his
favourites would become the
official news purveyors: all the others British and Sime Road alike illicit deal
ers. If it were the British C.O.,
then the Aus tralians would be the outlaws.
All this could have been most confusing had anyone except the succession of comm
anders appointed by Saito
worried anyway. As it was, no one did. All sets flourished while they could, sel
dom certain whether they were
black or official; and, in consequence, all official attempts at the censoring o
r suppression of news (not in
frequent, and an insult to camp intelligence) failed. There was no section of pe
ople in the world so thoroughly,
regularly and accurately informed upon the daily events in all theatres of the g
lobal war of 1944 as the
soldiers who were confined in Changi Gaol. The man who could not give an accurat
e r6sum6 of the day's
Allied bombings of Germany and the war on the Russian, Burmese, New Guinea and P
acific fronts: of the
political movements in the House of Commons and Congress: of the latest extravag
ances of San Francisco
radio and the points at which Radio Delhi differed from the B.B.C. that man was
simply not worth his salt! To
such a pitch had listener intelligence risen after three years of life in a soci
ety where radios and the B.B.C.
news were the subject of a death sentence.
3 THE AERODROME
Work on the aerodrome continued with unabated fury, we of the railway now taking
our lead (in
black-marketing and evading the worst guards) from the more experienced Changi-i
tes, who had been "on the
drome" for over a year.
The veterans of Changi had organized things well. Though to the beginner, and to
our guards, the air strip
appeared to be flanked with solid walls of jungle and swamp, the experienced pri
soner of war could take you
to certain bushes and, if you bent down and crawled under them, you entered a lo
ng tunnel through
sunwarmed lalang grass and low shrubs. And halfway down these tun nels, facing y
ou and lying happily on
their stomachs (for they are a lazy and indolent race) would be waiting native t
raders. Youths with a ready
grin and an infinite capacity for haggling. Thus you lay in the tunnel with the
object of the transaction
between you-* perhaps food that you wished to buy or a magneto stolen from a Jap
anese truck that you
wished to sell and for half an hour or so you bargained. Then at last, the trans
action complete, you would
slither backwards towards the strip through the tunnel of grass your progress wa
tched with idle interest by the
Malay who ky there waiting for his next customer. And when you reappeared on the
task, if the guard had
noticed your absence (not uncommon), you said:
"Benjo" and if he still looked suspicious, added: "Zuzu [Bellyacher]"
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Nothing, however, could detract from tihe tedium of the work it self. Digging ou
t the white, gritty, glaring
face of that hill, shovel ling it into skips, pushing the skips to the other sid
e of tibe strip and emptying them
onto its swampy fringe gradually filling in and levelling. Then, as a small corn
er was finished, uprooting all
the lines and the sleepers and carrying them to a fresh corner and laying them a
gain. Long lengths of rusty
steel lines and the difficult business of lowering them onto the sleepers so tha
t no fingers were caught. The
dread of working with Dutch Indonesian troops, who never bore their share of any
burden and always dropped
their end too soon so that the line sprang into the air again and fractured jaws
and broke legs and severed
fingers.
Fortunately, tedium was an old friend of ours now and we all had our various way
s of dealing with it Some,
like Hugh, worked stead ily without ever stopping. Just a rhythmic shovel and th
row, shovel and throw, for
however long the shift lasted. Others stole with an abandon and recklessness tha
t was terrifying and yet
seemed never to get them into trouble. (One even removed the machine gun from a
crashed Japanese fighter
before the Nip mechanics could get it.) Others spent the entire day planning the
ir postwar future usually
leaning reflectively on the handles of their shovels. This did not please Nippon
, but the bashings of Nippon no
longer terri fied. One becomes immune to anything even the Japanese. My own reci
pe was the mental exercise
of trying to recall to mind the second movement of Bruch's violin concerto and t
he proof of Pythagoras'
theorem about the square on the hypotenuse of a right-angled tri angle. For mont
hs the air was made sad with
a plaintive approximation of Bruch, whilst thousands of square yards of the air
strip were defaced with the
complex lines of Theorem 74 drawn with the blade of my changkol in its white dus
t. Regrettably, I never did
manage to prove Mr. Pythagoras statement and when I was one day arrested for dra
wing the plans of a
wireless set on the ground (nothing for hours would induce the guard to believe
that the hundreds of lines he
saw were related to anything so innocuous as geometry), I devoted my whole mind
to the less dangerous
problem of recapturing the strains of Bruch. It is remarkable to recall how many
of my friends did not know
how to prove the Pythagoras theorem and could not whistle to me the second movem
ent of the violin concerto
by Bruch.
The amount of work done by men who now weighed about eight stone instead of thei
r usual eleven or twelve
(and who sank to as low as five or six) was remarkable. The heat had no effect o
n them. They worked without
headwear, they wore only G strings, they ate less each day than international pr
ewar scientists had declared to
be the amount on which a man could continue to live, and yet they contrived to p
lug along for ten or twelve
hours on end, shifting tons of obstinate tailings in that time.
In one respect they did suffer more than ever. Skin diseases, never given a chan
ce, by sweat and rain and
working in bogs, to dry up, became worse than ever before. Scrotums were once mo
re raw legs once again
covered in sores hundreds of them. The doctors had obtained a purple dye, a gree
n dye, a red dye and
acriflavine, which was yellow. They painted these sores with all these dyes in t
urn and, though this had no
effect at all on the sores, it was at least most colourful.
The doctor who treated me took a tireless interest in my legs especially the thr
ee-year-old holes in my foot
which still refused to heal and tried everything. He scalded them clean with wat
er in which he maintained he
could insert his own elbow without dis comfort, though I never saw him do it He
prepared a culture from the
matter in my wounds and pumped it into me in ever-increasing doses, though alway
s with precisely the same
ineffectual result He scraped them clean till they all bled each day. He bound t
hem up and allowed them to
stew under the same dressing for a week. It made not the smallest difference. Al
ways there were hundreds of
nagging sores and always they flourished.
Finally he decided that a shock to the nervous system might clear them up. He th
erefore produced a very large
and not especially sharp hypodermic needle with its attendant syringe. He plunge
d the needle into the toughest
vein in my right arm and drew out fifteen cubic centimetres of my precious blood
. He then immediately rolled
me over and, plunging the same needle into my reluctant thigh, pumped the fiftee
n c.c,'s of my still warm
blood straight back into me. Nothing could have been better calculated than this
barbaric thrust to produce
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
shock nervous or otherwise. I trembled: I went bright grey: I felt sick: I saw t
hree of almost everything: my
head swam. Finally, I fainted. When I revived, my first thought was for my legs.
They must, I was convinced,
be cured. Eagerly I gazed down. From thigh to toe, they were covered in sores an
d remained so for a year.
After that I worried no more. Most people in Changi Gaol had the same experience
.
I finished my self-imposed task with Mein Rampf, having committed to memory its
last vitriolic page. Now I
must do something else to keep my mind off my revolting body with its weeping le
gs and its raw crutch and
its tendency to beriberi and dysentery. I flung about me for fresh fields of men
tal activity there was plenty of
scope.
There was knitting. Quite a lot of men now knitted and with great agility, too.
They stole Army jumpers from
the Japanese, un wound them into balls of wool and knitted them into socks which
they then sold back to the
Japanese for ten dollars a pair.
Or there were carving and engraving the main material being perspex from the win
dshields of crashed
Japanese planes. The Jap anese seemed not very expert at landing their planes on
the new aerodrome we had
built for them and many hit the trees at the commencement of the 4000-metre runw
ay. When they did
P.O.W,'s were always quick to strip the wreckages of perspex: and although its a
bsence worried the Japanese
salvage squads they never solved the mystery of where it got to. I realized, how
ever, that I had no talent and
less patience for perspex-engraving, so that was out.
There were also languages. In Changi every language, every lan guage known to ma
n, including Esperanto,
was taught by someone, I thought I might easily learn a language perhaps two.
And there was Exile Ronald Searle's beautifully illustrated monthly magazine. Hi
s cartoons were a delight and
he drew his articles widely from all sections of Changi's population. I thought
I might write. -Then I lost my
nerve and thought that I wouldn't Finally, I did and wished that I hadn t. Writi
ng is always like that.
And finally Piddington lured me into a nightly practising of some simple exercis
es in telepathy. These
exercises would swiftly have languished had it not been for the patronizing eye
cast upon them by Elser, the
Dutch hypnotist. I disliked him so intensely that I determined to succeed. And w
hen Piddington and I
eventually dem onstrated these experiments publicly, some said that it was a hoa
x, and quoted the Road to
Endor; and some said it was genuine, and quoted their own psychic experiences in
the various cases of their
old dead uncles and aunts and other relatives; but Elser, Elser to my unqualifie
d joy, said nothing, but
practised secretly himself each night, though with no success at all.
Thus Changi life regained its rhythm. Work, on the aerodrome, on the bore-holes,
in the kitchen, all day:
lectures or lessons or talk or knitting or a concert at night, in those first co
ol hours: then sleep usually in the
open courtyards, lying flat on one's face on the ground. Flat so that those thig
hbones did not wear through the
skin and cause an abscess. The human body seems able to adapt itself to anything
. Even sleeping a full night's
sleep on bare concrete under the stars, confident in the knowledge that in Malay
a it rarely rains at night.
My circle of friends eddied a little and swelled. Hugh I worked with each day on
the aerodrome, but as well
there were those who shared the courtyard in which I now slepta courtyard at the
end of which stood a huge
building forty feet high which was a stage with a wide proscenium: a courtyard w
hose space was mostly taken
up by seats in the open air made out of coconut trees split down their centre an
d placed flat side upwards. This
courtyard was Changf's theatre the Playhouse, as it was called.
And with me there lived Piddington, with whom, like Hugh, I had shared so much.
He was now wraithlike,
but his smile was as wide as ever, for all that he weighed only seven stone, and
he was consumed with a
febrile energy which meant that life with him was never dull. Philosophy "a phil
osophy of life" and travel
were his two main themes of conversation. Together we made many plans. His foots
teps when he walked the
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
corridors in his dogs were swift and sharp and impatient, like his voice with it
s stammer.
Then there was Chris Buckingham. He knew a bit about elec tricity and a bit abou
t the stage and a bit about
other things, but nothing very much about anything. This dissatisfied him and be
cause he had abscesses
which required frequent lancing an operation he endured in stoic English silence
he decided abruptly that one
day he would know a great deal about medicine. All the time in Changi, while we
philosophized and assured
Chris that the only way to endure this life was to say that nothing mattered all
this time Chris resolved that
one day, although now not even matriculated, he would know all about medicine. H
e is now a doctor and won
gold medals all the way through his course.
Also there was Ronald Searle. Ron was young, dark-haired, blueeyed and listened
keenly, but not with much
air of being impressed, to everything that was said. He was an artist.
He had left England with the 18th Division and travelled halfway round the world
so that at the last moment,
when all was already lost, he and his comrades might be flung into our tropic ca
mpaign in their English winter
uniforms. Ronald's interest in things military seemed to have died on that day.
His only interest thereafter lay
in training himself to be an artist so that when the war ended he might make his
mark in England. He therefore
drew assiduously, and criticized his own work mercilessly, from the first day of
the cap tivity to the last.
In Thailand, as a rapidly improving artist, he had proved himself a lamentable b
uilder of railways. The
Japanese were not slow to observe this fact and beat him on the head many times.
With theingenuity of the
born cartoonist and the unself-consciousness of the true artist, Searle took to
wearing a hat stuffed full of
lalang grass. After that, when the Japanese beat him on the head, he would sag a
little but remained unbent.
Then the Japanese realized that he was an artist and commissioned him to draw th
em dirty pictures, giving
him pencils and paper, and eggs to eat. He ate the eggs and with the pencils and
paper he drew everything but
dirty pictures thereby greatly irri tating the Japanese but (he declared) much i
mproving his economy of line.
He fell ill in Kamburi and when I saw him was covered from head to foot in a fou
l creeping skin disease. As
well his innards were torn with dysentery and his left hand his drawing hand hol
ed with ulcers. He lay in a
coma. But whenever he regained consciousness, he would crawl upright and draw wi
th his right hand, since
his left was useless. He should have lost that hand. He should have died everyon
e thought he would. And now
he lived in the courtyard and drew incessantly on the back of prewar prison reco
rds economizing with his
lines (whatever that meant) and evolving further atrocities for his schoolgirl c
artoons.
As well as that he designed and carried out the sets dcor, I believe is the word
for all the Playhouse shows,
which ranged from Coward to pantomime and which in quality and production could
easily have taken their
place in any of London's West End theatres. No man ever looked to the future wit
h a more steadfast and deter
mined eye than did Ron Searle with his wide blue ones. His presentday ranking as
Britain's most popular
cartoonist is no surprise to anyone who lived with him in Changi.
Spice was added to our company and its conversationby the pres ence of one Hap K
elly. Hap was a Yank
from Texas. He had been sunk in the naval battle in the Sunda Strait, between Ja
va and Sumatra, in 1942.
Hap had joined the U. S. Navy as a trumpeter. He was short, lean, thirtyish; had
the rubbery features that so
many Americans seem to have, and a wide mouth like Joe E. Brown. His wide mouth
con stantly grinned and
his bottom, in the Yank style, bespoke selfconfidence. He had joined the U. S. N
avy as a trumpeter because he
liked playing the trumpet and band business was bad. He had no desire, in the U.
S. Navy, to do anything
except play his trumpet
Imagine then his wrath when, in the first days of 1942, he was abruptly thrust i
nto a smoke-filled steel coop
and told to help. A shell was dumped in his arms and he passed it to the next ma
n and at the same time
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
demanded to know "What the hell?" The hell," it appeared, was a gun turret in th
e H ouston now committed,
with a token force of Australian and Dutch vessels, to a suicide battle with a J
apanese fleet.
"Say," protested Hap, "I didn't join this goddam fleet to load guns. I joined to
play a trumpet." But no one
heeded him and the whole scene became very noisy and smoky, so Hap gave up and c
arried on loading guns.
Then the walls of the turret began to get pink, so, in the uproar, Hap asked why
the walls of the turret were
pink.
"We're on fire," Hap was told.
"Well say," asserted Hap, "I didn't join no Navy to be burnt at sea. I joined to
play..." but no one was listening,
so Hap just carried on loading the gun.
But then lights glowed and whistles blew and there was great commotion.
"Say," asked Hap, "what's all the fuss?"
"Abandon ship," he was told, "you gotta swim for it" That was too much for Hap.
"Look, Buddy," he said, "I joined the Navy to play a trumpet and I can't swim."
But at that moment his buddy
flung "him overboard, so he had to.
Coaxed and coached by his buddies, Hap struggled on. Bits of wreckage helped as
ship after ship around them
in that circular holocaust for the Allied ships had deliberately steamed into th
e centre of the Japanese fleet and
then opened up sank. Slowly, one at a time, Hap's companions floundered and drow
ned. Finally, next day,
Hap, the U.S.N. trumpeter who cduldn't swim, landed alone on a beach fourteen mi
les away in Java. He was
captured in the jungle and shipped to Singapore. He now played the trombonerathe
r brilliantly in the
Playhouse orchestra.
"How's your swimming now, Hap?" I asked him, when we first got this story.
"Say," he said, "I went down one day on the salt-water party to Changi beach, yo
u know?" We said yes, we
knew. "And I jumped in the water and I swam. And, do you know what?" We waited,
en tranced. "I sank like
a goddam stone!" He grinned. "I guess," he added, "I'm a trumpeter, not a goddam
swimmer."
An academic flavour was given to our conversations by the inclusion of three of
the strongest-minded men in
Changi: Alec Downer, David Griffin and Tony Newsom.
Alec was the son of Sir John Downer, one of the architects of the Australian Fed
eral Constitution.
Oxford-educated, wealthy and gifted, Alec found the social restrictions imposed
by his rank of "gunner"
irritating and unjustifiable. He therefore modelled his prisoner-of-war life car
efully upon the principle of
knowing "people in high places" and making sure that they did what he wanted the
m to.
Griffin was a barrister, a scratch golfer, a witty talker and a sergeant. He, to
o, saw the virtue of knowing
people in high places and played his hand with skill throughout the war.
Newsom, short, incorrigibly cheerful and possessed of a riotous laugh, was exact
ly what he should have been:
the senior representative of Kolynos Toothpaste in South Australia.
These three men, the scholar, the lawyer and the salesman, from the first days o
f Selarang in 1942, ran the
library. Irked beyond endurance by the "officers-must-be-saluted-and-treated-lik
e-tin-gods" nonsense of 1942,
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
they called everyone who came to their library be he colonel or private "Mister"
! In this atmosphere of almost
prewar courtesy, they studied their readers tastes, persuaded men who never had
read to start, urged everyone
to steal books and contribute them to the library, ignored the nastiness that wa
s Nippon and whenever trouble
arose with any of the minions of officialdom promptly had it squashed by their t
ame "people in high places,"
The library which, between them, these three ran for all the days of our captivi
ty was one of our main
consolations and there could have been no better men to run it. Though their boo
ks (and they accumulated a
very respectable collection) became full of bugs which dropped onto your chest o
r crawled onto your fingers
as you read and raised huge lumps with their bites: though the backs broke and h
ad to be rebound with banana
leaf and latex and a little canvas: though the battle with the late borrower was
endless; they nevertheless
managed, through all those days, to maintain a centre where the cultured tones o
f Oxford chanting about the
seats of the mighty, and the caustic wit of the Bar, and the infectious cackle o
f the perfect bon viveur could all
be heard at once, as if the absurdities of war had never intruded upon their car
efully guarded lives.
And, as the last touch to our background, there was added the bizarre company of
the officers of an Italian
submarine. This submarine and seven others had left Vichy France for Singapore,
each carrying technicians
and duplicate blueprints, in the hopes that one, at least, might run the gauntle
t and reach the factories of
Nippon.
One did. And only one. It surfaced after a harrowing trip in Singapore Harbour i
n 1943. It was greeted by a
Japanese admiral who informed its crew that Italy had, since their departure fro
m Europe, surrendered.
Would they, the admiral enquired, like to continue the battle from Singapore?
No, said the Italians who, as they explained to us with great frankness, had nev
er greatly enjoyed any battles,
they would not!
The Japanese admiral regretted this and, all his powers of persuasion having fai
led to change the Italians'
attitude, he popped them into gaol with us.
This, at first, caused the Italians intense alarm. They had, they told us, been
informed by their propaganda
machine that Australians ate Italians! On the rations of 1943, there seemed no h
ope of their avoiding this fate.
When, however, at Christmastime the carnivorous Australians quietly deposited a
present of coconuts and
"doovers" outside the Italians hut, all fears vanished and international good wi
ll became a reality.
In consequence, I met Mario Brutti Liberati. He had about eight other names (mos
t of which seemed to be
girls ) and was a marquis as well, but this we ignored. To us he was Mario.
Mario was an authority on classical music, naval engineering and women--in the o
ther order. He spoke
excellent, though at times quaint, English. He was generous, amusing, widely tra
velled and enterprising. He
taught me Italian and introduced us to the art of cooking snails in palm oil. Ma
rio was a stimulating talker in
any body's language.
This immediate circle, with others not so close but just as good, with the Playh
ouse and Exile and the daily
B.B.C: news, was the mental stimulant which stopped me after ten hours a day of
Nippon from going cuckoo.
The first real news of our new gaol life came rushing through the cells and corr
idors and courtyards one
lunchtime in a carefully concealed gust of enthusiasm. It was June, 1944. The Al
lies had landed once more in
Europe. Into the eyes of every man came a gleam of anticipation. We had passed t
he blackness of 1943.
Nothing would ever be bad again.
"Soon," said Piddington, stammering eagerly, "this bloody war will end."
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
I nodded. Chris nodded. Ron Searle just went on drawing--he was drawing a cat. H
e had drawn it fifty times.
It was a cat we intended eating when he had finished drawing it, but apparently
he was using too many lines.
So whilst he, detached and determined, started his fifty-first drawing of the ca
t we three sat and thought about
the miracle of the end of the war.
3 THEATRE
The Playhouse undoubtedly deserves more mention there is not a Changi Gaol-ite w
ho does not remember it
vividly and with gratitude.
First, the building. Leslie Greener, when the seven thousand poured into the gao
l, designed a stage. It was the
complete and perfect stage. Broad, deep, plenty of space for scenery to be flown
above and for sets to be
manoeuvred from the wings. Altogether, it was a very large building. He therefor
e drew his plan on a very
small piece of paper. Relying on this mild deception, it was submitted for appro
val to Saito and Takahashi.
They assented on condition that no aerodrome workers were employed.
But Greener & Co. (mainly a gentleman called Daltry) had thought of this. A swar
m of officers, young and
old, swooped upon the courtyard and in no time at all had graded it so that it s
loped upwards away from where
the stage would stand, and they then started upon the construction of the stage
itself.
From every quarter of Singapore, from every job the working parties did, materia
ls were scrounged.
Galvanized iron, wood, plywood, wire, canvas, globes, screws and paint.
The engineers made pulleys out of wood and nails out of wire and suddenly, swift
ly, up shot the scaffolding;
round it went its clothing of galvanized iron; onto its floor went innumerable s
tolen boards; footlights and
floods were fixed; the stage forty feet high in all was complete.
Takahashi, gazing first of all at Greener's small piece of paper, and then at th
is monstrous edifice born of
OJR's thefts and officers labour, remonstrated mildly. "I gave permission," he s
aid through our interpreter,
"for a stage to be built not a skyscraper." Daltry, at whom the remark was direc
ted, merely turned and smiled
that vague smile which English gentlemen can smile but which means nothing. That
was the kind of answer
Takahashi understood and respected, so he went away without further complaint an
d the stage henceforth to
be known as the Playhouse remained.
For its material, the Playhouse drew on the old Australian Concert Party as augm
ented by any British talent
that could be unearthed. Because of the Australian commander's unalterable polic
y of preserving his Concert
Party intact, come what may, Changi now had a seasoned group of performers who,
led by John Wood, could
tackle any task with confidence.
The early brashness and crudeness of the Army performer had long since vanished
under the polishing
influence of John's London West End experience and the increasing demands of the
audiences. The shows
they gave had acquired a reputation for sophistication and originality. Those wh
o did not have genuine talent
at least acquired good technique. There was also a competent orchestra with a so
und knowledge of theory and
a willingness to work hard on arrangements and rehearsals a willingness which wa
s greatly encouraged by the
inclusion of Hap Kelly of the U.S.N.
They had, as well, an efficient stage staff, including set builders. When, to th
is nucleus, was added the
brilliance of Searle, the battle, as far as presentation was concerned, was won.

To mould this material, with the good will and blessings of all--even Takahashi
--came Daltry of the
gentlemanly smile.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Daltry had been a major in an artillery unit. He had sufficiently impressed ever
yone during the campaign itself
to be selected as one of a special escape party on the eve of Singapore's capitu
lation. As he stood waiting for
the boat to take him from the island, a shell fell at his feet, blew off a leg a
nd removed an eye. He remained on
the island.
Thenceforward, Daltry allowed nothing to worry him. If anyone asked him he invar
iably assured them that he
found life in Changi quite delightful. He was a fluent and outrageous conversati
onalist He emphasized all his
points by thumping his stump and pointing a long finger. His blind eye he ignore
d.
He was well equipped to produce Changi's entertainment, having, in the days befo
re the war, run the
Westminster Theatre in London. He swooped, therefore, on long crutches upon the
Playhouse and, to the
astonishment of all, opened its season with Autumn Crocus a gentle love story wh
ich the near-destroyed souls
of Thailand and the aerodrome-scorched workers of Changi found thoroughly deligh
tful. Having started his
career in Singapore's sterile gaol by staging a story of love in the cool height
s of a mountain, the outrageous
Daltry settled down to months of exhilarating production.
Two elements arose to enliven our work on the aerodrome. One was a new guard; th
e other was the inception
of a regular reconnaissance by Allied planes Superforts which, thirty thousand f
eet up and serenely deliberate
in that brilliant sunlit sky, gleamed silver and almost translucent, like fairie
s. They were very pretty, those
reconnaissance planes- The Japanese hated the sight of them.
At first when they arrived, their beautifully even purr making itself heard long
before they could be seen,
everyone would down tools changkols, picks, baskets, sledge hammers and lengths
of line and shout
excitedly: "Here she comes, * and gaze upwards. Mean time, from the other end of
the drome, all the Nip
planes, fighters and bombers, would take off as hurriedly as possible and scuttl
e away in the opposite
direction.
But soon the guards came to dislike our cheers and the shouts of "Here she comes
7 and if they heard anyone
commenting, or saw anyone look up, then they beat him severely. So then it becam
e necessary to comment
upon the purr of those engines without saying "Here she comes," or looking up. W
alking boldly into the
enemy's camp, we took his own word for aeroplane "sikorki" and, using rhyming sl
ang, called the recce plane
"Harry the Hawk."
And so, in the midst of emptying a skip, the keen-eared would suddenly mutter ca
sually: "Harry the Hawk's
with us again" and you could glance at your guard, remember the day's news of th
e Pacific campaign and the
advances in Europe, and think: "Your day, my lad, is coming to its close."
When Harry the Hawk or, as he was alternatively known, "The Boundary Rider," swo
oped insolently low so
that not even the Nips could ignore him, the guards would scream, "Currah! Curra
h!" and refuse us our break
in the afternoon, saying: "Yazume nei!" and adding vehemently: "War last one hun
dred years. Nippon
Number One!"
Our new guard--the second enlivening element--was a delightful little gentleman
called the Ice Cream Man.
He was called the Ice Cream Man because he was rather less than five feet tall,
wore a white topee, which
covered most of his face except a chin with a lamentable tendency to recede, spo
rted a white linen coat and
white gloves and shouted incessantly. After the first glance the British troops
were unanimous he was the Ice
Cream Man. He was never referred to as anything else. Not, at least, till he cam
e to recognize the sound of
those three syllables and to infer, quite accurately, from their contemptuous in
flection, that they applied to
himself. Then, because if he heard them he bashed the man who uttered them, he b
ecame Mr. Peters to the
Australians and Mr. Lyons to the Pommies, which was much the same thing.
The Ice Cream Man was now in charge of our work on the aerodrome. As a second-cl
ass private that was a
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
power he enjoyed. He would assemble our squads each morning in the pinkish light
, the Australians, the
British and the Dutch, in three separate groups. Then he would announce: "Nippon
Number One. All men say
MastaV" and point to himself. Then the British squad would shout out all their f
avourite terms for the
Japanese except Master. And the Australian squad in its turn would be riotous wi
th a clamour of "Yellow
bastards... apes ,.. galahs ,.. and drongos." And the Dutch squad the Indonesian
troops would kneel with their
hands clasped, as if in prayer, and say, "Master."
At once the clamour would break out afresh among the British and Australians thi
s time directed
indiscriminately both at our heroic allies and at Nippon.
"Papaws," we would taunt the Dutch troops papaws being green outside (like the D
utch uniform), yellow
inside and a strong emetic as well. "You syphilitic little monkey," we would roa
r at the Nip. It was all very
noisy and undignified, but gratifying. Also, it used to waste twenty minutes eve
ry morning when otherwise we
might have been working.
Then the Ice Cream Man, screaming with rage, his eyes blood shot, would point an
grily. "You," he would say,
"come heah," and motion a man forward with that peculiarly Japanese downwards fl
ap of the outstretched
fingers. Then again, "You, come heah." And again, and again, until he had six or
seven Englishmen and
Australians. These he would beat unconscious with his short truncheonlike cane.
And then, the Ice Cream
Man having established the superiority of Nippon, we would all march off to work
and I would return once
more to my mental searchings on the subjects of Messrs. Pythagoras and Bruch.
The day's work over, just as it began to darken a little, we would march back to
the gaol through the scrub,
catching snails and frogs on the way; through the hospital lines, with always a
glance in to see if Blain, the
Australian who weighed only four stone, still lived; through the officers* lines
immaculate, cool-looking men
playing chess and eating their evening meal; and then up along the outside of th
e high wall and in through the
big steel gate whose grey front still bore the shadow of His Majesty's coat of a
rms.
Once inside, the column of men streamed out in all directions and flooded down t
he various corridors,
clattering in their clogs, shouting to their mates in courtyards and cells, reta
iling to one another the latest
outrage perpetrated by the guards or the latest deal on the black.
Then they streamed into the courtyards, all at once, hundreds upon hundreds of n
aked men milling round the
few showers, washing themselves and their G strings. Washing cheerfully but urge
ntly with their lump of
gaol-made soap and the water which the Nips left on for only half an hour.
Almost before they had finished these ablutions, the day's mess orderlies were f
iling up to the central
cookhouse and a few minutes later dumping back, heavily laden with dixies and tu
bs of closepacked rice, two
men to a tub, the back one gaining leverage by bracing his spare hand against th
e leading man's shoulder.
The tubs would be set out on bamboo tables and the sergeant in charge would stan
d by checking each man's
number off as he collected his "messi messi." No doubling up in those days. And
leading up to the tubs of
rice, a long queue of newly washed men, who dipped their mess gear in a drum of
boiling water as they
passed to sterilize it of dysentery. And then give your number, collect the path
etic dollop of rice and the few
stewed leaves from the garden and off to wherever your favourite corner was maki
ng sure first that the leggi
number was nowhere near your own.
Back in the theatre courtyard, with Searle and Buckingham and Piddington, I woul
d sit down to eat.
Piddington and I cultivated a small dried pea called towgay in between wet sacks
and ate it when its green
shoots were one centimetre in length. Each day we had a spoonful, which was good
for beriberi and was said
to have been all that saved the lives of the survivors of the siege of Kut We di
dn't know whether this was true,
but we took no risks. As well we added a spoonful each of red palm oil. Meant on
ly for the manufacture of
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
soap, it tasted vile, but doctors assured us that it was nutritious, so each day
we ate it.
That was our ordinary meal rice, greens, towgay and palm oil. But occasionally w
e would catch a dog or a cat
or a snake and then, by agreement with Hap Kelly and Slim de Grey (of whom more
later), we would prepare
a magnificent stew and eat till we bulged. If they caught a dog or a cat or a sn
ake, I then we shared with them.
It was a very good arrangment, but since private cooking within the gaol especia
lly of dogs, cats or snakes
was forbidden by our own authorities, it required organization and cunning.
On the subject of food our own authorities did, at times, tend to be shortsighte
d. Admittedly wood was scarce
and that meant that the kitchen was hard-pressed for fuel. But if men who had do
ne a day's work could be
bothered to carry back their own timber for their own fire to cook their own cat
s or snails or whatever it was,
then, it seemed to us, they should be allowed to do so. And, indeed, so we did o
rders to the contrary
notwithstanding.
Occasionally things came to a head as when the Australian com mand issued an ord
er, read to our assembled
ranks on the night's check parade in the Girdle Road, that:
"O.R,'s must not in future eat snails and any snails they do bring back must be
surrendered to the officers*
poultry farm."
The reason: the officers poultry were dying for lack of just such proteins as sn
ails provide, and from the
officers* poultry a percentage of eggs was supplied to the hospital. We, however
, made a lightning calculation
of the number of poultry meals enjoyed by commissioned men only: of the minute f
raction of the total number
of hospital patients who snails or no snails to the officers fowls received eggs
: and of the undoubted beneficial
effect upon our own scabby legs and weeping scrotums of snail eating. In one upr
oarious gale of laughter we
rejected the order as absurd.
[* For the information of the shrinking reader, snake tastes like gritty chicken
mixed with fish; dog tastes like
rather coarse beef: cat like rabbit, only better; and snails (Changi-style) like
something cut off a tire by
Messrs. Dunlop.]
Thereafter, however, our mess tins were searched daily for snails and any found
there were confiscated. This
meant carrying them back from the aerodrome to the gaol in our G strings. No one
who has not walked a mile
and a half with a crutchful of snails is in any position to aver that those who
have do not thoroughly deserve
them.
O.R,'s were not, though, by any means the only sufferers from official interfere
nce on dietetic subjects.
Though officers, in spite of the fuel shortage, could cook themselves into a pul
p if they were so inclined, what
they could cook was the subject of vehement legislation.
Thus one patient soul who trapped sparrows with a Heath Robinson-like contraptio
n of bricks, strings and
grains of rice, was flatly forbidden to convert the feathery bones into a soup.
Sadly he destroyed his machine
and gave up endeavouring to supplement his meagre diet.
Another, an especially mad Englishman named Lucas, who was a friend of ours, for
days stalked a
frilly-necked lizard. At length, having pursued it over acres of ground and up m
any palm trees, he caught it.
He was just about to pop it into his stewing pot when an order was rushed down t
o him by a captain. In
astonishment, Lucas read the order:
"Officers will not eat lizards," it said. Lizard eating, it appeared, was infra
dig for officers.
Lucas, though he was mad, was also very determined. He climbed another palm tree
and, from a length of
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
jungle vine, he suspended his lizard so that it hung, just out of reach, outside
the office of the colonel who had
issued the order.
Two days later, when the office was practically uninhabitable because of the sti
nk, and all efforts to knock
down the rapidly decomposing corpse had failed, the order was withdrawn. The nex
t time Lucas caught a
lizard, he cooked and ate it undisturbed.
In short prisoners of war in the Far East ate anything which was not actually po
isonous--even, in Thailand, the
fungus off trees. The only meat it never occurred to the prisoners of the Japane
se to touch was human flesh.
This may not seem especially remarkable. When, however, one considers that under
conditions considerably
less atrocious than those of Thailand and Burma the Japanese in New Guinea frequ
ently resorted to
cannibalism (and have, many of them, since been proved guilty of the crime and h
anged for it), then perhaps
the moral strength of the Britisher in situations of extreme and protracted cris
is will be better appreciated.
5 THE FOURTH YEAR
Hugh went to hospital with the Bug. We Thailand people seemed constantly to be g
oing down into those attap
huts outside the gaol walls with somethiing--dysentery 3 the Bug, ulcers to have
skin grafts, always
something. We tended at times to feel sorry for ourselves.
One day Black Jack the senior Australian officer in Changi collected all the F a
nd H Force men together in the
one gaol courtyard and spoke to us. "You blokes," he said, "had a rough time. We
all know that. We're all
sorry. But it's over now and I just want to tell you that at the moment you're t
urning into the greatest mob of
rogues, thieves, malingerers and vagabonds I ever set eyes on. Now snap out of i
tl That's all!" and with that he
left.
It did us a lot of good. From that day forward the melancholic sense of the Burm
a Boys that they were
different, that they deserved more of things than other men, died. We became one
society the men of Changi
Gaol.
Whilst attending to a radio one night a radio housed under the boilers of the co
okhouse where there was no
room to stand and the heat was unbearable a place the Nips would never look one
of the "news" receivers
allowed the sweat to drop off his forehead into the set, and with a brittle snap
the hot valves cracked. The set
went dead and we, in the gaol, were without news. Though the Playhouse presented
Noel Coward's Tonight at
8:30, and though lectures were given in all the courtyards, the absence of "grif
t" the word "news" was never
used was intolerable.
How the service was restored is a strange story, most of which I got from Hugh i
n hospital.
It appeared that one day he had left the ward to go to the bore holes. On his re
turn, at the foot of his bed space
on the wooden chung, he found some food and some money. He asked the orderly who
se they were and was
told they had been left for him by a "young Australian bloke."
Twice this happened and, as well, it happened to other men who were ill; but no
one knew who the mysterious
benefactor was. Then one day Hugh caught him at it A slight, dark-haired youth,
quiet and pleasant-faced his
only outstanding feature a missing front tooth. Challenged with being the source
of so much help, the young
ster (then only just twenty-one) agreed. He was on a good thing on the black, he
explained, and liked to lend a
hand. His name was Paddy Matthews.
Gradually Hugh got his story. It seemed that he stole fearlessly truck parts mai
nly and sold well to the
Chinese. And as well he had an interest, purely adventurous, in running radios.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
When the cookhouse set broke down, Paddy decided that spare parts for radios wer
e essential. In the course of
his prowlings on the aerodrome he had discovered that the Japanese Barracks the
old Roberts Hospital
contained a room on he ground floor which was full of radio parts.
He therefore set out one night armed with a sack and a screw driver to collect s
pares. He crawled into a drain
which ran under the girdle road and out at the corner of the gaol, its grill hav
ing long since been severed. He
evaded guards and patrols and made his way down through the scrub to the aerodro
me.
Hugging the shadow of the wall that had been cut out of the hill, he walked down
the strip until he reached the
barracks. Then he slipped inside and, passing between two rows of sleeping Nips,
padded quietly to the door
of the storeroom. Cautiously he turned the handle. Locked!
At that point most men would have seized the excuse to abandon the project and r
eturn home. Not Paddy. He
unscrewed the hinges of the door with his screwdriver and lifted the door gently
out of its place. He then
stepped into the store and filled his bag, systematically, and slowly lest he ma
ke a noise, with everything that
would be required for the continued running of several radios for several years.
Then he stepped out into the
corridor again.
And at that moment he heard a sentry approaching on his patrol.
No time to screw the door back on to its hinges, so he merely stood it upright i
n its place, and then slipped up
the staircase onto the next landing.
The sentry came down the corridor slowly, thumping each locked door with Ids rif
le butt, idly flashing his
torch. Nothing ever happened to this sentry.
He reached the wireless storeroom, thumped its door, flashed his torch and wande
red on, humming quietly to
himself and not noticing that the door swayed when he hit it. As soon as he turn
ed the corner, Paddy sped
down the stairs again. With sure fingers, he screwed the hinges back onto the do
or. Then he laid his sack
carefully over his shoulders, crept swiftly down between the sleeping Nips and o
ut onto the air strip.
An hour later he was back in the gaol and Changi's radios, what ever the mishaps
, were never again short of
spares or replacements.
Christmas of 1944 came and with it presents and cards and, of course, at the Pla
yhouse, a pantomime. This
pantomime was called Twinkletoes and, like all good pantos, was topical, tuneful
, colourful and hilarious.
The script was written by Keith Stevens, better known as a red headed female wit
h an ample bosom and a
bawdy tongue, and Slim de Grey. Slim was six foot two inches tall, incredibly le
an, and had that kind of
wide-eyed appeal which in dogs is irresistible. With Ray TuUipan, Slim wrote all
the songs (lyrics and tunes)
for the panto.
Slim composed by sitting on the end of his bed, vacant-eyed, his legs swinging,
occasionally humming a note
or strumming a guitar. Then suddenly he would shout, "I've got it C mon, Boardie
" (this to Boardman, the
pianist), and before he lost it again, not un common, the two would rush to the
Playhouse piano where, as
Slim hummed, Boardman would tinkle and write down the notes.
TuUipan composed more sombrely, TuUipan didn't sit, he lay.
And, as he lay on his bed, he stropped a long and evil-looking knife incessantly
up and down the palm of his
hand. And as he stropped, he glowered burningly with his dark eyes at those whom
he didn't like. Long stares
of brooding distaste. Then, as if he had decided upon a victim, he would suddenl
y sit up and for the moment
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
put his knife away while he wrote down on paper the melody that had come to his
mind.
So the panto went on a riot of clowning and magical sets by Searle (sets created
out of canvas and
different-coloured muds and crayons ) and a fearful hag of a witch who was Daltr
y, with his one eye and his
one leg and a most ungentiemanly screech. But best of all in that panto were the
seven or eight new tunes
which set Changi by the ears and had us humming happily for months. Even nowa da
ys there are few men
who were in that gaol who cannot sing you the words and tune of "Castles in the
Air."
It was at one of the shows at the Playhouse that we first met Kio Kara. Kio Hara
was a Korean who, with that
infallible Asiatic in tuition for anticipating economic and political crises, no
w clearly foresaw the defeat of
Japan and wished to witness this event with a clean nose of his own.
Accordingly he had for some time plotted to release himself and his fellow Korea
ns from the Japanese yoke.
Many of them now anxious to forget their incredible viciousness on the railway a
nd naively announcing that
they had been forced by the nasty Japanese thus to be vicious suddenly became qu
ite friendly. About Kio
Hara I was never quite certain. On the score, however, that I detested all Korea
ns and Japanese alike with a
beautifully impartial detestation I did not trust him. In this, possibly, I was
unjust.
In any event one night he cornered Chris Buckingham and spoke most earnestly to
frmi for some hours. Later
he did the same with Ron Searle. Finally Chris came to me and told me the setup.

Kio Hara, anxious to get out of Japanese control and to endear himself to what h
e regarded as the new masters
the Allies planned to escape. He planned to escape in an aeroplane with a crew o
f British prisoners of war. He
had complete details as to aerodrome drill, guard changes on the drome, times wh
en planes were fuelled and
checked, and navigational maps. He required a pilot, a naviga tor and company pr
eferably Ron, Chris,
Piddington and myself. What, Chris asked me, did I think?
I said I was frightened. I felt that I had had my share of luck so far and was n
ot game for any escape attempt
now that the war was ending. I remembered my capture, Van Rennan, the guards dra
wing crosses in the mud
in Thailand. I was still alive, I reflected, and I fully intended remaining so.
Shamelessly I announced that I had
not the guts to attempt Kio Harass scheme and withdrew from it. My only contribu
tion was to advise Chris to
lay full details of the plan before the most respected soldier in the gaol Colon
el Dillon.
This Chris did and he and Ron (Piddington also withdrew from the plot because he
felt it his duty to continue
running his absurd wireless set) obtained Dillon's blessing. The plot grew more
and more definite and the
danger to the plotters greater and greater. The courtyard in which we lived beca
me a place of tension and
whispers and dark suspicion.
Then it all broke. One day Chris talked apparently casually though in actual fac
t most earnestly to Kio Hara in
the open ground where the trailers of the wood party were parked. Our own admini
stration either panicking at
his plot or out of sheer inexcusable stupidity (equally culpable in either case)
arrested him for fraternizing
with the enemy. To the extreme rage of the entire camp and in the face of Colone
l Dillon's approval of the
plan from its inception, an English administration cast an English soldier, who
was courageously planning to
do the duty of every prisoner of war to escape into solitary confinement in cell
s! The solitary-confine ment
order we ignored, visiting Chris regularly and endeavouring to comfort him. The
arrest, however, distressed
him considerably and put an end to all ideas in the future of escaping. Escapes
are too difficult when as well
as the Japanese one must evade one's own command.
The New Year sped on and I celebrated my twenty-fourth birthday. I was touched t
o receive so many cards. It
always does seem touching when other people remember your birthday though not at
all when you remember
theirs. And these laboriously produced greetings in a society where any paper co
mmanded a price of a dollar
for two square inches (enough to wrap a cigarette) were especially touching. The
re was also homemade said
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
(rice and pine apple skin fermented with the sweetness of gulah malacca) with wh
ich to drink toasts: and
altogether the day was memorable, even if the said did have a most evil aftereff
ect.
Then came February and the anniversary of the fall of Singapore and the Nips, as
always, celebrated riotously.
It was not a celebration in which we displayed much enthusiasm, except that this
year, for the first time, we
felt: "This, you little apes, will be your last." Meantime, from Changi Gaol tow
er, above the radar grill which
didn't work, the poached egg continued to float oppressively over our heads. Tha
t tower and the flag were
always there symbol of everything we hated.
And one night at midnight when all would normally have been quiet, the gaol was
suddenly rent with howls
and screams and the banging of tins and the clatter of eating-irons against the
wall Frantically the guard fell
out and machine guns were swung round to cover this revolt. But before any shots
could be fired, the clamour
subsided and everywhere there was silence again. The cause of it all--an Austral
ian with a leaning towards
statistics had worked out that that midnight marked our thousandth day in captiv
ity. He and his friends were
celebrating.
6 ON OUR RETURN
The camaraderie that had existed in Pudu between Englishmen and Australian, betw
een O.R,'s and officers,
began slowly to gain strength in Changi. To this process impetus was added by th
e "characters" to be found in
the various elements of our society.
Men like Alec Downer, the librarian who knew people in High Places and who talke
d perfect Oxford English
not only talked it but taught it to many an Australian whose flat nasal accents
he could no longer stand.
Taught it with laborious exercises over those vowel sounds which we Australians
tend to murder.
And Professor Roberts, the tiny Pommy with the enormous nose and the acid wit, w
ho lectured to vast
audiences on the glories of Communism and converted not a one but amused them al
l.
And best of all the two English Indian Army majors, Bartram and Dart known to al
l as Bartram & Darto.
These two told outrageous Poonah stories all the time about huntin tigers and sp
yin in Afghanistan and snipin
in the Khyber Pass. Invariably, when Bartram told his delightful and monstrous t
ales, he would add:
"Now you may doubt this, gentlemen, but I know it's true because I was there--ah
!" And if he wasn't there, his
wife was!
And one day he told the story, complete with the most graphic and frightful deta
ils, of the Black Hole of
Calcutta. Now surely, thought his delighted audience especially the Australians
he can't have been there! Not
even his wife, they thought, can have been there. Not in the Black Hole of Calcu
tta.
"Now you may doubt all this," the major stated calmly in conclusion, "but I assu
re you that it's true. I wasn't
there," he explained, "and my wife wasn't there,' he continued, "BUT," and here
came complete victory to
Bartram, "my great-aunt, SHE was there!"
Thus did Bartram & Darto, elderly, moustached, and complete replicas of the clas
sic Indian Army officer, vie
with one another, day in and day out.
Finally the Concert Party produced, to the delight of the entire gaol, a sketch
in which the two were
unmistakably portrayed. Our cup of joy was made full when Darto, at the end of t
he performance, hastened
round backstage.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
"That sketch," he roared, "that sketch about the Indian Army fellahs. Damned goo
d, old boy. Damned good.
Knew two fellahs in Poonah just like that once!" and stumping out of the dressin
g room, still muttering,
"Damned good," he left.
The Playhouse decided next to stage a cavalcade of song. This com mended itself
enormously to the Pommy
element, who like nothing so well as good old tunes, and even we Australians cau
ght the infection of their
enthusiasm.
Bill Williams, the pianist who dragged a small portable pedal organ all around T
hailand and played boogie on
it in every camp, planned the show. Orchestrations were attacked with enthusiasm
by a dozen different men in
the band. Searle designed a score of quickly changed sets. The cavalcade was to
cover the gamut of
twentiethcentury popular tunes and to conclude with the latest Changi compositio
ns.
The first night was an elaborate affair attended by the entire Japanese administ
ration, including General Saito.
Quickly the show swung into action and as song followed song, set followed set a
nd novelty followed
novelty, it became obvious that the audience Nips and aU w^re with it, gripped.
The elaborate scene changes went without a hitch, Piddington and Buckingham swea
ting over charts and
property lists. Searle, serious and unemotional, stood in one corner drawing an
Indonesian youth as he danced.
Then came the finale, a new composition of Bill Williams'. First of all, with mu
ch hooting and smoke, the
bow of a steamer sailed majestically onto the stage. It was the full height of t
he stage and its creation had
involved every ounce of Searle's artistry and the car penter's ingenuity. And, a
s it reached centre stage, Bill
started singing his new song, "On Our Return." The company joined in, flooding o
nto the stage like voyagers
about to embark. The audience was electrified and joined in the last chorus. The
curtain rang down and midst
frantic applause Saito and his entourage stalked out in sullen silence.
That was the last show to be staged in the Playhouse. Saito, furious at the titl
e of the song^ at its sentiment, at
its reception, banned all further entertainment and would barely be dissuaded fr
om having Williams and the
entire company executed. The war, he pointed out angrily, would last a hundred y
ears. Nippon was Number
One!
Negotiations to get the ban relaxed were futile. Saito stuck grimly to his decis
ion. Not only that, but rations
were cut and a search staged for radios. The Nips were obviously extremely put o
ut.
At a final meeting to discuss the matter, all the British administra tive office
rs sat before Saito and Takahashi,
who listened to all that the interpreter relayed on to them and looked implacabl
e.
The British officers thereupon uttered some strongly worded com ments of their o
wn on both Saito and
Takahashi. These the Aus tralian interpreter did not trouble to pass on.
Abruptly Saito indicated that the meeting was over. As was the formality demande
d at that time each British
officer bowed to Saito usually a rather perfunctory nod, for the Britisher does
not acquire an Oriental bow
with ease. The British colonel, however, believed in doing the job thoroughly an
d bowed low. As Takahashi
surveyed this courtly inclination of the colonel's body, he turned to the Austra
lian interpreter and, in perfect
English, remarked: "Rather Elizabethan, don't you think?" which was the only rem
ark he ever made in English
and set the entire gaol furiously to wondering.
With the closing of the theatre life came to revolve more around the art of conv
ersation and the consolation to
be derived from the com pany of one's friends. At night then, the day's work don
e, Changi became dotted with
groups in every courtyard who sat and in quiet tones talked of the "griff * and
their plans and their
homeswhilst all the time the inevitable fag passed amicably from hand to hand fo
r each member of that united
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
group to take a "drag." The smoke would be drawn, one drag, deep down into the l
ungs, head flung back in
satisfaction, as momentarily all cares vanished into the arms of the goddess nic
otine. Then, with a plumelike
exhalation, the smoke would be blown out, and the tiny cigarette passed on to th
e next sunburnt hand.
Talk and laughter rippled round those courtyards in low murmurs. Strange that th
ere was never discontent nor
angeralways that low confident tone and the plans for the future and the blithe
certainty that in six months the
war would be won.
Ron talked quietly of Cambridge before the war and the cartoons he planned to se
ll after it. Chris wondered
how long it took to matriculate and whether Norwich would help him with his plan
s for medicine. Jack
Garrett declared firmly that he would go home and win the Australian Professiona
l Squash Championship and
did. Piddington and I planned tours of England, where we would stay for week end
s with Daltry and see all
the places that these Pommies talked about the country we Australians always cal
led "Home." And in the
meantime Piddington, with Tommy Thompson of Sime Road, ran a radio, which struck
me as an extremely
dangerous thing to do; and with me gave fairly regular public demonstrations of
the tests we had evolved
round our nightly telepathy seances.
In the course of those frequent demonstrations we were by no means infallibly su
ccessful as far as my
reception of what Piddington transmitted was concerned. On one occasion we perfo
rmed for a Dutch audience
and achieved the remarkable feat of getting nothing rightnothing at all they bei
ng the most cussed,
unco-operative group for whom we had ever worked; and I, in spite of Kddington's
soothing charm, being
aggressively aware of the fact. On another occasion a line from one of Shakespea
re's plays was written up
which read: "And through the instrument his pate made way"; and no efforts of Sy
dney's would induce me to
do more than announce, with a cackle of laughter, that a bald-headed old gentlem
an had been clocked with a
violin. On such occasions Sydney gave me firmly to understand that neither he no
r Dr. Rhine was pleased
with me. But it didn't matter nothing mattered!
And so it went on, sometimes right, sometimes wrong, but always causing fierce a
rguments which (the
authorities seemed to think) was a good thing. Certainly it was encouraging to s
ee the response of the men in
the hospital huts. The huts themselves were a hundred metres long, earth-floored
, attap structuresintensely
depressing. On either side of the central aisle there were platforms. On these p
lat forms, side by side, lay
hundreds of men, dying, amongst other things, of lack of the interest to live be
cause there is little point in
continuing to survive when life consists only of a starvation diet and bug bites
, not to mention the griping
pains of dysentery and the agony of constant dressings (always with bandages tha
t have been used again and
again over the past three years), of ulcers and sores that never heal, and of th
e fires of constant fever.
Piddington and I, therefore, were delighted when, after our first show in die T.
B. hut, we left about ninety
skeleton-like men roused to such a pitch of bitter argument that their eyes flas
hed again and their poor,
fleshless chests swelled with fury. Two of them both due to die within a fortnig
ht were, for the first time in
months, up off their backs on their feet endeavouring to fight. Even young Norm,
the most desperately
afflicted of them all, roused himself from his stupor and said: TDon't believe i
t! Must have dreamed it like
every thing else!"
Young Norm had become the focal point of the camp's struggle to save these T.B.
patients. For two years now
he had refused to die. He weighed only about fifty pounds. He ate only occasiona
lly and had no taste for rice.
When he asked for any food from caviare to pineapple cakes it became a point of
honour for outside working
parties that day (before he fell again into his coma) to steal it Every time he
dozed off his young face (for he
was only nineteen) became utterly peaceful as he dreamed his dreams. And when he
woke the orderlies would
ask him where he'd been. "Home," he used to say simply. And then they would ask
him what he had done at
home, and Norm would tell them with the quiet confidence of one who believes wha
t he says implicitly. The
orderlies would pass on his dreams to those who brought him stolen delicacies an
d they, in turn, would pass
them on to the rest of the camp. "How's young Norm today?" became as habitual a
question with us all at that
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
time as "What's the griff?" And always it was followed by "What's he done at hom
e lately?" because Norm's
dreams about home were always so much better than ours.
The battle to save young Norm was fought with all the ferocity that the British
sympathy for the underdog
infallibly evokes. He achieved a parity of status in Changi Gaol with the Second
Front and the possibility of
catching a dog for the cooking pot. So when he roused himself from his pleasant
fantasies to say: "Don't
believe it! Must have dreamed it like everything else," Piddington and I felt al
most as proud as if we had
brought him a plateful of bully beef and sweetened condensed milk which, in thos
e days, was our con ception
of the last word in culinary bliss.
Young Norm died in December and for a moment the whole camp sagged until those w
ho were with him told
the story of how, on this occasion, he had dreamed himself at a Christmas party
and, tired, had decided that he
must have a sleep. No man in his senses could begrudge young Norm the long comfo
rt of that last after-
Christmas sleep.
And after all this lights out and to sleep. The cells full of soldiers now immun
e to the bugs. The grills over the
well of the cell blocks littered with men sleeping with that same childlike aban
don that always tugged at your
heart. Why should they be so thin and sleep for years in gaols away from home wh
en they looked as helpless
as that? I would go down to the footpath in the courtyard, flat on my face to sp
are those bony thighs, anikles
out, feet in, and to sleep till tomorrow.
And one morning we woke up to find that Germany had surrendered. The war in Euro
pe was over. With
mocking eyes we looked at Nippon, whose turn was next TDamm^, damme,' Nippon sai
d, "DeutzeF they
always called Germany Deutzel "Deutzel Number Ten. Nippon Number One. War finish
in one hundred
years."
7 THE HIROSHIMA INCIDENT
With the end of the European war to be explained away and the first air raids ov
er Singapore a hundred
fairylike Superfortresses at a time to add point to the advances in the Southeas
t Asian war, Nippon did not
remain calm.
When each air raid came the Nip Air Force fled till the All Clear sounded: but t
his did not save their shipping
in the docks from destruction, nor their stores from being burnt, nor their dump
s from being blown up. And all
the time more and more vessels limped into the docks in the Johore Strait for re
pairs that could not be done.
Meantime, Burma was being cleared by an avenging 14th Army and Mountbatten was a
ssembling an
amphibious invasion force to retake Malaya.
Angrily the Nips demanded working parties for unknown tasks in Malaya. For the s
econd time in my career I
crossed the causeway to work on a project that did not bode well.
We left the gaol in batches of a hundred. We were stripped of everything when we
left and radios were
consequently not part of our equipment when we landed in our new camps in Johore
.
Arrived there, we were told that we were to build tunnels for ambushes, earthwor
ks for defences, huge walls
for dumps. We were to work until the last minute, carrying ammunition where nece
ssary, then when
hand-to-hand fighting became imminent we were to be shot
Under this constant threat we laboured thenceforth. It was not pleasant. Nor was
the work. Our group was
detailed for tunnelling. We dug tunnels about four metres wide and about four me
tres high as far into the sides
of hills as possible. Dug them into clay with pit-props of green rubber. Soon th
e rubber rotted in the damp and
the clay dropped, a whole hill of it, and the tunnels filled. Often there were m
en inside. Once the falling clay
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
grips you round the ankles, with its heavy clammy grip, you can't move. You may
only stand and wait to see
how high the tide of orange earth will rise. Some of us were lucky: others were
not. The Japanese seemed in
different as to what happened to us, so long as the tunnels went in deeply and q
uickly and the tailings were
removed far away so that no indication might be given to the invading troops tha
t an ambush had been
prepared.
For weeks we worked thus, returning at night to a gloomy hut in the rubber. Damp
and closely guarded. Only
once did we get a respite and that was a day at the Johore Barracks, where we we
re required to move a store
of clothing. In the process we found a small toilet stacked from floor to roof w
ith linen bags full of Jap anese
Army biscuits. Little round biscuits like marbles and hard as iron. All day we s
tole and munched these
biscuits. By nightfall, though our jaws ached agonizingly, we had consumed the l
ot and felt extremely well
fed. The pay-off came on the next day when a Dutch party, the usual native troop
s, were sent to replace us at
the barracks. Just before they knocked off, the theft of the barracks entire sup
ply of ration biscuits was
discovered. The Dutch troops were mercilessly thrashed by their "masters" for ha
ving indulged in this
wickedness. As they marched past our hut that night it did our hearts good not a
nice, charitable good,
admittedly; but neverthe less, good to see their blackened eyes and bloodied hea
ds.
Then came a rumour that we were to be shot next day. And to settle our fate for
if we were to be shot we had
determined to be shot running the resourceful Paddy Matthews stole a wireless se
t and listened in that night.
That night was August 15, 1945, and Paddy told us not to worry, that he had just
heard that the war was over.
The Emperor of Japan, overwhelmed by the power of atomic bombs and faced with th
e prospect of an
invasion of Nippon, Jiad unconditionally surrendered.
Three days later even the Japanese themselves admitted that we need no longer wo
rk. But the war had not
been won: nor lost. It had simply, for the moment, stopped. They ceased to bello
w "Currah" and instead
bowed politely when we passed. The food which they had recently declared to be n
on-existent they now
produced in vast quantities so that we might eat our fill. Likewise drugs appear
ed from everywhere and in
profusion.
Then we all assembled, thousands upon thousands of men, until there were sevente
en thousand there, in
Changi Gaol. British para troopers arrived and were greeted politely by the Japa
nese. Then Mountbatten
arrived and (though we were ordered not to by our administration) a few of us wa
lked the seventeen miles into
Singa pore to see him accept ItagaM's surrender. At that brief ceremony, when Mo
untbatten drove fearlessly
down through hundreds of thousands of hysterical Malays and Chinese, standing up
right in an open car: when
Itagaki met him on the steps of the civic hall and handed over his sword for tha
t brief moment I felt that the
war really was over. But it didn't last
I walked down to the harbour and on board the Sussex where I was fed and washed
and given clean clothes by
the ever-hospitable matelots of the Royal Navy. I stayed there, smuggled away, f
or two days: then returned to
the gaol in a jeep with eighteen other "sight seeing" P.O.W. s.
At the gaol I heard that the Ice Cream Man no longer lived which didn't surprise
me. Also that we were now
in the hands of an organization known as RAPWI (which meant "Rehabilitation of A
llied Prisoners of War
and Internees * and was surely impressive enough).
When, a month later, we still languished on the island impatiently awaiting ship
ping home, RAPWI was
rechristened in the British manner Retain All Prisoners of War Indefinitely.
This seemed to sting someone into activity, for at once we were drafted into shi
ploads and the docks became
crowded with trans ports.
We said all our good-byes.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Mario left, waving an excited Latin farewell, for Italy. Ron Searle and Chris de
parted for Britain the one for
fame, the other for medicine. Hap Kelly flew ostentatiously and swiftly back to
Texas in a Skymaster, sent
promptly by an ever-attentive government. David Griffin flew to Sydney and the B
ar: Downer to Adelaide
and the Federal Australian Parliament Hugh went home on one ship, Piddington on
another, I on a third.
The careful fabric of one's personal life, built up over four years, disintegrat
ed at a single blow. One felt
curiously alone as the ship sailed out of Singapore Harbourexcept for the moment
when old Harry Smith was
spotted leaning, as melancholy as ever, against the rail of a ship we passed. As
one man, our vessel roared:
"You'll never get off the island," at which Hany waved miserably and we laughed.

Then the sense of loneliness returned. All those blokes, Pommies and Australians
: all those ties gone. And
then I realized, as I looked back and in the distance saw Changf's tower with it
s radar screen that didn't work,
and above it the flagmast from which the poached egg had now vanished and the Un
ion Jack flew, what was
the trouble. The disintegration wouldn't matter if it had been caused by the end
of the war. That was the
trouble. For us, and for the un defeated Japanese soldiers all over Southeast As
ia, the war hadn't ended. It had
just, momentarily, stopped. The tower slid out of view; the symbol of our captiv
ity was gone but now I could
think only of the words of a thousand guards, of Saito himself, of Terai the int
el lectual who spoke English
and wrote plays: "War finish one hun dred years."
So, for those of us who had suffered under them, and for the Nipponese themselve
s, this was just an
interlude--the Hiroshima Incident, probably, they would call it. But the war its
elf, of Asia against the white
man, that under one guise or another: in one place or another still had ninety-f
ive years to go. The trouble was,
of course, that no one at home would believe it.
And with that I brightened. After all, the sea was green and clear: the sun was
warm and free: there was food
aplenty and no need for anxiety as the old ship ploughed her confident way east
wards, away from Singapore.
We were all going Home. That, for the moment, must be enough.
POSTSCRIPT THE GUTS OF THE MATTER
When, before the war, a government official, now Lord Llewellyn, queried Major G
eneral Dobbie about the
complete absence of fortifications on the north coast of Singapore, though the e
ast and the west and the south
bristled with armaments, the general replied simply: "The north needs no fortifi
cation. No one could get
through the jungle that leads to it,'
Unfortunately, the Japanese were never informed of this fact.
"The defences of Singapore are still considerably below standard,"
Sir John Dill, May 6, 1941
"I would not tolerate the idea of abandoning the struggle for Egypt, and was res
igned to pay whatever forfeits
were exacted in Malaya. This view was also shared by my colleagues.
"I am sure that nothing we could have spared at this time, even at the cost of w
recking the Middle Eastern
theatre or cutting off supplies to the Soviet, would have changed the march of f
ate in Malaya,"
Winston Churchill: The Grand Alliance
"To defend the Northern Malayan Thailand frontier alone 40 bat talions and 3 mac
hine gun regiments and 2
anti-tank regiments, with normal tank support, are the minimum required,"
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
Singapore Defence Conference, 1940
In all of Malaya there were only 32 battalions and no tanks at all to resist the
Japanese.
"556 first-line aircraft are required in Malaya,"
Singapore Defence Conference, 1940
"Relying mainly on Air Power it was deemed necessary to hold the whole of Malaya
... [but] In no case was
the strength of the gar rison really adequate for the defence of the aerodromes,
'
General PercivaTs Report on Malayan Campaign In all of Malaya, of all types Tige
r Moths, antiquated
bombers, inferior fighters there were only 141 aircraft, none of them, by Japane
se standards, first-line.
"It cannot be too strongly stressed that the object of the defence was the prote
ction of the Naval Base and later
of the Air Bases at Singapore."
General Percivals Report
Notwithstanding this "stress" by the time the attack on that Navd Base and later
the Air Bases was sprung,
General Perdvafs staff had frittered away the lives and energies and equipment o
f about two thirds of their
most experienced and seasoned troops in the fruitless defence of the Malayan Pen
insula itself.
"Our whole fighting reputation is at stake... It will be disgracefull if we yiel
d our boasted fortress of Singapore
to inferior enemy forces."
General Wavell, February 10, 1942
Five days later Singapore fell!
There are only three deductions that can be made from this last order and its se
quel. First, that our British
fighting reputation was thereby disgraced. Or, second, that the enemy forces wer
e not in fact inferior. Or,
third, that the order was purely propagandist and not in fact a true appreciatio
n by a brilliant soldier of the
position on Singapore Island as it was in the first days of February, 1942.
As to which of these three deductions is the correct one let the reader, having
read this book, judge for
himself.
"The war will last one hundred years."
Imperial Japanese Army, 1945
"All the critics of the Treaty emphasize that the Japanese population of 86 mill
ion cannot possibly be confined
to the four home islands."
Sunday Times (on Japanese press opinion), July 15, 1951 This book was completed
one year before the
signing of the Peace Treaty with Japan. It represents the views of the author th
en. Those views have not
changed.
R. B.
BY RUSSELL BRADDON
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