JAPAN SURRENDERS
The
American army advanced rapidly on the Japanese positions. In 1945,
Japan’s army was pushed back into its archipelago, and the Allies
massively bombed the country’s main cities. This operation culminated in
the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the beginning of
August, a show of force that convinced Japan to surrender a few days
later on August 15th. Their capitulation was officially signed on
September 2nd.
Starting in 1944, the prisoners
started seeing many signs that the war was coming to an end. At the
camps, many Canadians reported seeing American aircraft, which indicated
the proximity of the U.S. Navy to their positions. In Japan, civilian
internees, who were put with the military prisoners in the labour camps,
started looking like “walking ghosts” according to Rifleman William
Tuppert.
The prisoners were quickly informed
that the war was over and that they would soon be released. Allied
aircraft regularly passed over the camps and dropped packages with
supplies. The Canadians lived in the camps with some sense of peace
until they returned home in September
In
keeping with U.S. policy, in 1952 Canada absolved Japan of any
responsibility for wartime atrocities. With the rise of communism in
Asia and the Cold War becoming a reality, the United States needed Japan
to be a reliable ally. The trials of war criminals were therefore
governed by politics rather than justice. In Hong Kong, however, the
colonial administration held 60 trials against Japanese war criminals.
Colonel Esao Tokunaga, who was in charge of all camps in Hong Kong, was
arrested and sentenced to death.
REPARATIONS
Hong
Kong veterans fought for a long time to receive reparations for the
conditions of their incarceration. It was not until December 11, 1998,
that the Canadian government agreed to compensate the victims with
approximately $24,000 each. On December 8, 2011, 70 years after the
battle, Japan formally apologized to the Canadian POWs but did not offer
any financial compensation.
KEEPING THEIR MEMORY ALIVE
Out
of the 1,975 Canadians who left in October 1941, about 550 never
returned home: nearly 290 fell in battle, and about 260 died at the
prison camps. Most of the fallen are buried at the Sai Wan War Cemetery
in Hong Kong; 137 others, most of whom died in captivity, are buried in
the Commonwealth War Cemetery in Yokohama. All physical evidence of the
fighting is gone, and most of the camps have been demolished.
Canadian
troops who helped defend Hong Kong have been honoured in different
ways. Many received medals and awards. In 2015, China even gave Canadian
veterans a medal to recognize their combat contributions. In Ottawa, a
memorial wall in their honour is engraved with the names of all members
of “C” Force: the 1,973 soldiers, the two military nursing sisters, and
even the dog Gander. Although these two regiments no longer exist, their
memory remains alive.
Photo #1: The Sai Wan
Military Cemetery in Hong Kong was erected in 1946 in memory of the
Allied soldiers who died in battle and in prisoner of war camps. The
Cross of Sacrifice aims to honour Canadian soldiers (source: Canadian
War Museum).
Photo #2: Graves of Canadian soldiers buried at Sai Wan Cemetery (source: Canadian War Museum).
Photo
#3: One of the two commemorative plaques placed at Sham Shui Po Park.
The only trace remaining of the fighting in Hong Kong, this plaque was
installed in 1989 by the Hong Kong Prisoners of War Association in honor
of the men who died in Hong Kong during the war (source: Hong Kong
Veterans Commemorative Association).
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