He died before we got to town
Heroes Remember
Transcript
Yes, the war was finished in May '45, and in November '46, they,
you were called up. It, it started off at ( inaudible ) but, of
course, they didn't get too many of them, and we were supposed
to go to Indonesia. And sure, they, they shouldn't start at the
. . . get the conscripts and . . .you didn't train. It, it only
. . . we were only in . . . I, I, I got calls in November the
7th, and in May the next year, we were on the boat to Indonesia.
We had a very lousy training. I was on rifle range only once.
Well, we had, we had . . . In our unit we had the women, five or
six of them, that looked after the laundry and that looked after
the premises. And a few guys along with them. They did the heavy
work and they, they got paid. And, so, every, once a month, when
we got paid, we had a collection to give them better money, too.
And they, they ate from our kitchen, and they had our smokes,
and all that stuff. And, and, and the, the white man, the
colonial guy, from the big corporations, they came, and they
said, "What? You shouldn't do this. I mean, you're spoiling
these people." And you know . . . But we, we couldn't see that .
. .they . . . nothing. And that’s the only way. You know, if
you're good to people, they'll be good to you. One, one of them,
I remember, he was with us all this time and he, he, he was, he
was first was, he was a prisoner of war. And he stayed with us,
he stayed with us, and at the end he, he carried the Bren gun,
too. You know, he was one of us, yeah. The Japanese had to be un
. . . disarmed and get it off and you had to restore peace, and
people had a . . . the trust of the people . . . had to get it
back. This was a rough time too. We got transferred one time. We
were in a big column of trucks and went through a mountain road.
And our truck was the target and we were, we were in the back of
the truck with the three of us. And one guy got killed, and the
other guy, he shot through his hand. And I was pretty lucky, I
didn't get nothing. And this bothered me for a long time, that
this guy got shot and he, he got . . . died before they came to
town. And this bothered me for a long time. That, that is a
horrifying experience. Yeah, here you have the three of you,
and two of them got shot.
Description
Mr. Lammers discusses his army service in Indonesia and once again having to deal with death.
Henk Lammers
Mr. Lammers was born near Amsterdam, Holland, on March 11, 1926. At the time of German occupation, he was 14 and worked on his and his neighbour’s farms. He offers numerous perspectives on life in Holland during the Second World War. In 1946, Mr. Lammers joined the Dutch Army and served a tour of duty in Dutch Indonesia, namely Sumatra and Java. Mr. Lammers now resides in Ayton, Ontario, where he has been actively involved with the Cadets.
Meta Data
- Medium:
- Video
- Owner:
- Veterans Affairs Canada
- Duration:
- 2:50
- Person Interviewed:
- Henk Lammers
- War, Conflict or Mission:
- Second World War
- Location/Theatre:
- Holland/Netherlands
- Battle/Campaign:
- Liberation of Holland
- Branch:
- Army
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