Description
Thomas Smith Forsyth
Mr. Forsyth was born on a farm just outside of Pipestone, Manitoba, on April 26, 1910. He worked on the farm and attended school until grade 11, joining the army the following year when war was declared. After being accepted into the Winnipeg Grenadiers, Mr. Forsyth was briefly stationed in Jamaica guarding German POWs before being posted to Hong Kong. Captured in the Battle of Hong Kong, Mr. Forsyth was interned as a POW in North Point and Sham Shui Po prison camps, before being sent to Niigata Camp 5B in Japan as a slave labourer. After years of heavy labour, physical abuse, and terrible living conditions, Mr. Forsyth was liberated from 5B when Japan surrendered. He returned to his family in Manitoba soon thereafter.
Transcript
Interviewer: Tokunaga was the commandant. Yes.
Right right. And, and so, so the commandant he, he wrenches a, the staff from one of the overseers, a six-sided hardwood, branded with the logo of the Marutso (sp) docks, branded with a hot iron. And he started calling to pound, pound Tetman over the head with this. It's a heavy staff, it was heavier, quite a bit heavier then a, then a fork handle, six sided with a logo with a Marutso (sp) docks branded on, and, and all three shifts of the guards were around us, and they didn't have their rifles, they had machine guns. And we, afterwards we, we, we spoke a long time about that, and we believed that they were sure that we would interfere, and they were going to this as an excuse just to, just to kill, just to kill us, that's the only reason they'd have, have machine guns out. But, but, so we came in from working on the docks and Tetman was dead with a fractured skull, and Mortimer was still tied to the stake, and his feet were frozen, and they cut him loose and, and we helped him into a hut and his feet thawed out and gangrene set in, gangrene set in, and his feet rotted away, and he died.