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Heroes Remember

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Transcript
I was in hospital until, in the army hospital in Fredericton. They transferred me up from Lancaster to Fredericton, and I was there, I tried again, I tried and this time I was successful in convincing the military doctors that my health was better than they thought. I told, I got the doctor to listen, I collared him one day and I said, "How long do you keep people that have had pneumothorax?" He said, "Well about six months." I said, "Well, what am I doing here?" I said. "I've had it for two years or more." And he looked, he looked very strange and, and he said, "Let me check." So he went back and that was the first time anybody had ever read my record, I guess. So, I got out the next day. But I was still, when I went home I tried to make up for all the, all the time that I had been away, playing hockey and probably partying a little too much, even though I wasn't very much of a party person. And anyway, I ended up back in hospital again. And I got out again after six months and I did the same thing, I ended up back in hospital. And that convinced me that, finally that I couldn't do this sort of thing. So I, when, the last time I was in hospital I, well I had, before I even went overseas, when I joined the army I had, I had, I had told my mother that I would go back to school when I, when my service was finished, and so I, when I got out of hospital the last time or, well not quite the last time, but the last time for tuberculosis, I went back to school and eventually to university, and so it was 1952 before I joined the workforce. Interviewer: When you think back, Mr. Ewing, on your time in the Canadian Army, the chaotic battle of Hong Kong, the miserable conditions and squalor that you lived in for almost four years in Japanese captivity. When you think back on that experience, how would you say that it affected you in later life? Well, I guess it made me appreciate life. I certainly appreciate what I was able to do, it gave me, I think, the ability to stick with something that I didn't necessarily like but had to be done. So, I guess, and I suppose also perhaps I'm more thoughtful of, of other people and certainly more knowledgeable about my own self. Interviewer: Did you experience any psychological difficulties coming back to Canada? I think, I don't think so. I recall having an assessment made in, when I was in the hospital in Saint John, New Brunswick, the Lancaster Military Hospital, and, and when the guy was all finished he said that you know, in his report, something about "level headed" and "apparently wants to get on with, wants to get on with his life and forget the past." But I didn't necessarily forget the past but I got on with life all right.
Description

War camps and illness weakened Mr Ewing physically but they did not affect his mind and his return to normal life.

Kenneth Alexander Ewing

Kenneth Ewing was born in 1925, the 4th oldest of 12 children. His father was a civil engineer for the province of New Brunswick which enabled them to manage fairly well during the Depression. His father was a Lieutenant in the First World War and signed up as an engineer in the Second World War from 1942 to 1945. Mr. Ewing quit school in Grade 10 at the age of 15 to join the army. He was unsuccessful in his attempt to join the Merchant Navy and joined the militia in the spring of 1940. He then joined the N.B. Rangers (militia). In November 1940, he went active with the Royal Rifles. He did his basic training in Botwood, Newfoundland, guarding the port. He did further guard duty in Botwood, Gander, and St. John's, Newfoundland, Valcartier, Quebec, and Saint John, New Brunswick. He was posted to Hong Kong as a rifleman in "A" Company. He was taken POW and sent to a slave labour camp in Japan where he endured beatings, disease, and very poor living conditions but considered himself lucky since other Canadians had been executed.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Duration:
04:25
Person Interviewed:
Kenneth Alexander Ewing
War, Conflict or Mission:
Second World War
Location/Theatre:
Canada
Battle/Campaign:
Hong Kong
Branch:
Army
Units/Ship:
Royal Rifles of Canada
Rank:
Private
Occupation:
Rifleman

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