Lt Col KN Bakshi, author of I was a Prisoner of War in China, retired from the Indian Army 18 years back and settled down in USA. Though the border war of 1962 may have been too insignificant an incident in the history of the Nation, for individuals like the author involved in the actual fight, it was an unforgettable experience, details of which are indelibly etched on his heart. This book reveals for the first time, a true and human story of a soldier who carries physical disabilities to this day from this war. Details of a Chinese prison camp come out vividly after an exhausting war and capture. The designated ground as prison camp had nothing to eat and there were no medical facilities. At the altitude of 8000 ft. blankets were stolen by brother soldiers to keep themselves warm. Wounds continued to bleed for lack of medicare. Colonel Bakshi received 5 bullet wounds, metal fragments of grenades resulting in abnormal blood loss and severe pain. And surgery was performed by a Chinese doctor in the open field without the normal facilities of an operation room. All the baser and finer traits of an individual's character come to the fore in this first person story.
本书内容主要是写二战期间日军通过海路运送战俘的过程犯下的滔天罪行.二战期间,日本为弥补国内劳力的不足,大规模征用盟军战俘充当奴隶劳工 ...
Mates in Hell: The Secret Diary of Don McLaren, POW of the Japanese 1942-1945
Cpl Richard P. Bussell, Cpl Rhodun M. Byers, Sgt Lloyd R. Chavez, PFC Asier Chintis, Cpl Nicholas Coffey, ... Set Walter J. Goforth, PFC Joseph K Gomez, Pvt Clyde D. Hall, Sgt Wallace A. Henderson, Cpl Luther A Herrera, ...
In 1966 the area reeked of the paper mills along that stretch of the river . You have to smell them to believe them , but the human nose can get used to anything . We drove from Fort Riley to Benning . We sold our trailer before we left ...
was initially a holding camp for prisoners moving north, but with the progression of the war and an increase in the numbers of American prisoners taken, it soon became a regular prison camp like most of the other facilities in and ...
Dick Campbell was born at Kyabram in 1920.
The final book of the trilogy. Ulrich is back in custody and describes life behind barbed wire culminating in his fourth and final bid to get back to Germany.
Illustrated with contemporary photographs and artefacts from his time in the camps, this book will be of interest to WW2 historians and the general reader alike.
Describes the experiences of Charles Pierson as a prisoner of war in prison camps in Italy and Germany, during World War 2.
Robert Menzies to J. C. Neagle , 15 November 1950 , and Senator Denham Henty to A.W. Fadden , NAA , A462 / 8 item 446/1/5 ; E. E. Dunlop , The War Diaries of Weary Dunlop , Penguin Books , Melbourne , 1986 , p . xxi . 26.