Actually the fighting carried up, right up until the moment they
signed the, sometimes a little bit after the truce, before the
people were informed of it, you see. Actually, I got involved
before the truce was signed, while the truce talks were going on.
I was delegated to go up to a village called Moonsoni,
which was very close to Panmunjom. And we had a number of tents
set up there, which were called Freedom Village. This was for the
first exchange of prisoners. These were the wounded prisoners.
And I was the Canadian doctor delegate to that exchange.
And what we did was, wounded troops came in, some of them were
walking, some had recovered enough that they were walking,
some of them came in by sketcher, either by helicopters, larger
helicopters would bring in a bunch or sometimes by box ambulances
on the ground. But some came in walking, quite capable of walking
So what we did, is we did a quick check to see whether they were
sufficiently well, to travel by whatever means onward. And check
them off against our missing prisoner of war list. And then
passed them on down the line. While I was there, I actually got
in, to see the troop's building at Panmonjon, which I've since
seen just this past year, when I went back to Korea. And so it
was a rather interesting time. I could tell you a story that's
quite interesting too. While we were receiving prisoners,
I received one man, who wasn't on our list. He was not among
the POW list and he was not missing in action list either,
actually he had, he was a Mandu too. And he had been injured,
he had been shot in the head. And he was so critically injured
that his troops believed he was either dead or dying. And they
left him and he was picked up by the Chinese, who brought him
back to health. And he actually walked in. He was limping
a bit but he was talking normally and walking on his own,
on his own steam and so it was a rather, rather interesting time.
And of course, I was seeing the British Commonwealth troops and
in general, they were in pretty good shape. They still maintained
military discipline. They came back in the Chinese prisoner of
war costumes, but they were soldierly about the way they came
back. They saluted their officers and what not. They were a
pretty well behaved bunch, you know. I don't think that was true
of all of the troops, you know. I think the Americans had a,
had it pretty rough. They weren't respected as troops by the
Chinese and North Koreans. And they were treated rather badly
at times, you know and didn't, didn't do well in the prisoner of
war camps, according to the things I heard, you know. And when
they came back, they were not a very soldierly looking bunch,
you know. They slouched and didn't look like soldiers at all, no.