Prison food
Heroes Remember
Transcript
The rice, of course, was full of maggots.
You could tell when you picked it up
there was little black spots in it and
that was the head or the front part of
one of those maggots.
I don't know where the maggots
came from, from flies or what
they came from.
That would turn your stomach anyway.
You try to pick it out and pick it over
but it was hopeless.
And the soup with the
greens in it, was another thing that...
It was food and I guess there was a
little bit of vitamins in the greens,
I don't know, but there was certainly
none in the rice that I know of
except water and that was the
other thing, of course.
They kept everybody awake there,
they were running to the urinal every
half hour or so because the rice,
that's all it was, it was water and
the soup was the same thing
except for that little bit of greens.
Description
Mr. Agerbak tells us what the prison food was like while in captivity.
Borge Agerbak
Borge Agerbak was born in Odense, Denmark and immigrated to Canada with his family in 1927 to a small town in southern Manitoba called Pilot Mound. Mr. Agerback worked on the farm until war broke out in 1939. Along with his two brothers, he decided to join the Winnipeg Grenadiers.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Recorded:
- July 17, 2013
- Duration:
- 1;16
- Person Interviewed:
- Borge Agerbak
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Hong Kong
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