
No 1 Allied General hosiptal
Bandoeng, Java.
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As in all battles and advances and particularly retreats, the "other ranks" have little idea of the set-up. Just take orders, sit and wait,
do this, do that, and hope the top brass know their job! This was particularly the case during that night in Sumatra. I had previously been through a long
retreat in the Western Desert and knew the traumas associated with such. As it turned out in this war I was never to be associated with an advancement
unfortunately.
We eventually arrived back in Oesthaven around noon the following day. The natural attractive harbour was full of ships - mostly
freighters and oil tankers with our "Orcades" being the largest of all. Ships’ lifeboats were all along the wharves and even tied up on the jungle
shore. Some had engines but many only had oars. I managed to be fortunate enough to be assigned to a motorised one from "Orcades" and was soon
aboard. We stayed in the harbour until nightfall and even as we sailed out the harbour was still full of small craft ferrying troops to the various ships. I
was never made aware of the casualties suffered by our particular group of men as I was an attached person to a group of men I scarcely knew or had a chance
to get to know. Later on in various camps I met up with the occasional chap who may have remembered me or I him during our mad scramble to and from Palembang.
However I feel sure to this day many men were left to an unknown fate in Southern Sumatra. By the time our ship was outside the harbour and as it turned out,
on its way to Batavia, I was once again reunited with my mates in the A.C.C.S.
We berthed in Batavia the following morning and prepared to disembark. Actually we left the ship three times, for no sooner were we on
the wharf than we were ordered aboard again. Finally after the third disembarkation, we were marched to the station where we boarded the train for Bandoeng in
Central Java. Because of its high elevation, Bandoeng was a popular place of residence for the Dutch as a cool change of climate from the hot and humid
regions along the coast. To us it was also a welcome relief from our past couple of years in the Middle East and desert environment. It consisted of lush
jungle, well kept streets and beautiful homes belonging to the mostly wealthy Dutch. Here, once we had established a forward hospital, we managed to forget
the war for a few days.
It was perhaps a week after our hurried and disorganised departure from Sumatra that the Japanese invaded Java. Once again all troops
were under Dutch administration and once again Australian commanders were hampered by Dutch rules and commands. Although the two Australian battalions and one
American field regiment put up remarkable resistance to the determined invading Japanese, the ‘writing was on the wall’ well before the final capitulation
on March 8, 1942.
It was about three days from this date before we saw our first Japanese in Bandoeng. They arrived in trucks and armoured vehicles,
lined us up, counted us over and over and finally marched us all including doctors and nursing staff, to the civilian prison. We had no female nurses as these
were never disembarked from the "Orcades". The wounded in the hospital were transported to civil hospitals in the town. So began the traumas, trials
and horror of life as a Japanese POW. Unlike German POW’s I had met in the Western Desert, these Japanese were so frighteningly different from those
handsome, young, blond, German boys. A different culture and outlook on life in general and dressed in rough cloth uniforms and putties from boots to knees
with cloth peaked caps covering a shaven head.
At the gaol we were placed in cells about ten to a cell normally meant for four. We were only allowed to take one haversack into which
we crammed all we could. Eating utensils, spare clothes, shaving kit and if possible a blanket was included. Here we were introduced to our jailers whom we
would grow to detest for the remainder of our POW existence - KOREANS!! Japanese officers would be in charge, but Koreans would be our immediate
"bosses". A Korean can never carry any rank in the Japanese Army and was used solely for guarding purposes and transportation of materials to the
front line. Always a rear echelon soldier and not overly popular with the Japanese soldier and in many cases openly despised.
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