Guerilla Warfare
Heroes Remember
Transcript
They taught us different things like, the ones that were
interpreters that has to know Chinese in writing and
we had to learn demolition of various types of plastic bombs
and time fuses and then we had to learn wireless codes
and so forth for reporting back to the bridge.
We had to learn survival, we had to learn how to swim
and wade rivers and just ordinary sabotage.
Well we were organized jungle fighting in civilian clothes
to organize a population, which, a lot of them were Chinese
and we would be designated to land in certain areas.
Where they are known, they are known ahead that we would
be parachuting in that area and we had to learn to parachute
of course, only three jumps; one morning, one day time,
afternoon type and then one at night, just the three jumps to learn.
And we were organized into groups of about ten to a group
and certain groups had to learn their specializing in certain,
like being the wireless they had to be top notch in that area
and to be a demolition we had to be a demolition expert in that area
and to be interpreters or anything like that we had to be
very knowledgeable in language and well over all
any type of guerilla knowledge that we had to be.
Description
Mr. Wong speaks about guerilla warfare training and how each person was trained in a specific area.
Victor Eric Wong
Mr Wong was born in Victoria, BC and enlisted in 1944 at the age of 18. He went overseas to fight in China after training at Camp Shiloh in Manitoba. He was a rifleman with the Special Operative Executive that fought in Burma and was trained in guerilla warfare.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 02:44
- Person Interviewed:
- Victor Eric Wong
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Burma
- Branch:
- Army
- Units/Ship:
- Special Operative Executive
- Occupation:
- Rifleman
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