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I Had Never Handled A Bren Gun

I Had Never Handled A Bren Gun

Mr. Billson describes being placed in charge of a Bren gun, a weapon he had never handled. His unit is sent to protect a pillbox at Tai Tam Gap without being issued any ammunition. When the ammo arrives, it isn't Bren cartridges, it is hand grenades. Eventually a few cartridges arrive.

Taking  A Life

Taking A Life

Mr. Billson discusses the fact that despite overwhelming odds, he found that shooting a man for the first time was “hard to take”. After that, however, he didn't care.

No Place To Hide

No Place To Hide

Mr. Billson describes feeling threatened by the Japanese no matter where he was on the island. He recalls feeling particularly vulnerable at Stanley Fort.

Japanese Hierarchy Of Discipline

Japanese Hierarchy Of Discipline

Mr. Billson describes the Japanese habit of slapping prisoners as a disciplinary measure, but explains that it is merely an extension of the Japanese military culture.

I was put on a drill.

I was put on a drill.

Mr. Billson describes his duties in the coal mine as a drill operator, the extraction procedure, and the potential risks of working in the mine.

Measures of Japanese Successes

Measures of Japanese Successes

Mr. Billson describes how the POW’s treatment by the guards generally mirrored Japan's successes and setbacks in the war.

Crude Medicine

Crude Medicine

Mr. Billson describes two incidents where he received crude medical treatment. One was having a gash above his eye doused in alcohol and stitched without freezing, and the other was an aching tooth that was packed with cotton and soaked with carbolic acid.

The War Ends

The War Ends

Mr. Billson discusses how work in the mine suddenly ended, signaling Japanese capitulation, and how the guards were all gone the following day.

A Dangerous Food Drop

A Dangerous Food Drop

Mr. Billson describes a terrible irony of being liberated. Two POWs are killed when pallets parachuted in by the Americans strike them.

A-Bomb Aftermath

A-Bomb Aftermath

Mr. Billson describes viewing the devastation after the bombing of Nagasaki. The only intact things he sees are few porcelain toilets. He also describes how the blast had rolled all the sod up the surrounding hills.

First Taste of Freedom

First Taste of Freedom

Mr. Billson describes arriving in Manila, being immunized by Australian nurses at an American hospital, and being given two hundred dollars American.

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