We pretty well knew when the Japs were losing because that’s when
they’d beat the hell out of us. Oh yeah, when they were winning
it was not as bad. When they started to lose... And one time, we
were... Where was this? This was in Hong Kong. At some place
the Americans had an aircraft carrier fast enough to...
and I believe that plane... I never heard of it in any of these
books around that I’ve been looking at, but it seemed to me the
name on it was a B-38. It had a red nose. And they came over.
This was a new plane that the Americans had and they could just
loop the loop and shoot the Japs down. And, of course,
we started to hoot, and the moment we did the Japs come
along and we all got a crack in the back of the head with the
butt of a rifle. And after that, when they’d come over to bomb,
we had to lay right down and put our face down. We couldn’t
look up or anything. So, things like this, it gave us an idea
that the Americans were getting closer.
Interviewer: Your camp was too far away from the major
cities to see the bombing that was done by the US Air Force?
Oh yeah, yeah, only except for the atomic bomb. We knew
it had happened. It broke the windows out of our camp. We knew
something had happened there. The Japanese were running around
crying, like the officers. They were taking this hard. The rumour
was going that there was a truce on, because we did not go down
in the mines. That would be on the 6th I think, and on the 9th
when they dropped the other, the Big Boy, we really knew that
it was over. The Japanese, they moved all the bad fellows that
used to beat the hell out of us, they moved them all out.
They put new troops in, older troops and more pleasant.
It was quite possibly... The highest we had up in our camp up
there was a sergeant major. They took all our officers away
when we went up to Omini. So it’s quite possible that our
sergeant major might have known that something was going on,
because we did not go into the mine. What the Japs were doing,
they were getting better to us so I’m sure he had an inkling
of what was going on. When the war ended, the Americans come
over, and at our place we put up a big POW sign, and we used a
mirror until they found us. Because when he found us, he dipped
his wings, and then he circled around and they made a food drop.
And of course this was an INF. I’ll never forget, the happiest
day of our life. Camel cigarettes, M&V, chewing gum, you name it,
we had it. So some people just had chocolates, and they would
just eat and eat. A lot of them were sick. But, one thing,
I didn’t. I listened to what the doctor said. I was hungry,
but I just had so much. The doctor, we had one, a Dr. Smith,
American, and he had told us, he said, “Don’t eat too much.
Your stomachs had shrank so much, you can die from it.”
And some of our boys had. A couple of our boys did die from it.
They swelled up, and you know, they just kept eating.