Book
Recommendation: Forgotten
Highlander: An Incredible WWII Story of Survival in the Pacific by Alistair Urquhart
This brutal book was written by Urquhart when he was 90,
because he didn’t want the story of massive Japanese atrocities swept under the
rug in the interests of better trade relations. It reminded me of the struggle
Vietnam vets have had to get the truth out. The Germans admitted their guilt,
but to this day, the Japanese government denies this happened. The author never
fired a shot in anger. As a young Scot, he was drafted into the Gordon
Highlanders in 1939. His battalion was sent to Singapore where they were taken
prisoner when the British surrendered to the Japanese army. I have long wonder
why a larger British force would surrender the “Gibraltar of the East” to a
Japanese force half their size. This book explained that. They were poorly
trained, poorly led, poorly organized, and poorly equipped. The author was sent
as slave labor to work on the “Railway of Death” for 750 days. The “Bridge on
the River Kwai” was a sanitized version of the story. Many thousands of British
prisoners and tens of thousands of local inhabitant slaves died and were buried
along the way. They were beaten daily, forced to work every day on a cup of
rice and a cup of water twice a day, denied medicine and anything else.
Urquhart then was put of a hell ship with hundreds stuffed in unventilated
holds, with even less food. The Japanese had marked their ammo ships with Red
Crosses but not the POW ships. Torpedoed by an American sub, he was miraculously
blown clear and floated for days without food or water in the sun. Picked up by
Japanese fishermen, he was forced to work in the mines outside Nagasaki until
the bomb ended the war. He was treated shabbily by the British government when
he returned home, and suffered from what we now know as PTSD all his life. And
no wonder. I recommend this book for the strong of stomach and heart.
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