Barbed wire and bamboo : Australian POWs in Europe, North Africa, Singapore, Thailand and Japan

Bibliographic Information

Barbed wire and bamboo : Australian POWs in Europe, North Africa, Singapore, Thailand and Japan

Hugh V. Clarke and Colin Burgess

Allen & Unwin, 1992

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book contains a collection of stories of captivity and escape from World Wars I and II, all involving Australian soldiers. The stories tell of capture, imprisonment and escape - in Europe, under German and Italian captors, and in Southeast Asia. There was quite a contrast between being a prisoner of the Europeans and a prisoner of the Japanese; Japan, unlike Germany and Italy, was not a signatory to the Geneva Convention on the treatment of prisoners of war and, of over 22,000 Australians taken prisoner by the Japanese, more than one third died in captivity. The German and Italians acknowledged that escape was a PoW's duty, while the Japanese regarded any attempt to escape as an offence punishable by execution. "Barbed Wire and Bamboo" thus presents contrasting PoW experiences - of daring escapes from Colditz Castle and endurance and slow suffering in Japanese created hell camps.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 Europe and North Africa: the way to captivity
  • the Great War
  • terror in the mines
  • revenge
  • only the stars to guide
  • airmen on the run
  • life and death under the Italians
  • the luck of the draw
  • escape from Gruppignano
  • breakout
  • prisoners by command
  • seamen behind wire
  • remembering Klagenfurt
  • witnesses to hell
  • Kriegiedon pot pourri
  • a billion to one
  • death march
  • reflections. Part 2 Singapore, Thailand and Japan: the fall of Singapore
  • the Great World
  • the embankment at Wampo
  • Japan after Burma and Thailand
  • torpedoed
  • the beginning of the end
  • liberation in Mukden.

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