Attention!
Cette vidéo est disponible en anglais seulement.
Description
Mr. Peters describes various disease with which he and other prisoners were afflicted.
Transcription
I think the first one was dysentery. There I was fortunate too, and the dysentery I got it right after the war was over and I was still in reasonably good shape. I could fight it off but oh it was horrible. For days and days and days I did nothing but lay out on the tennis court that was right close to the washroom and that’s all I did. I laid there and eventually I um, but at that time right after the capitulation the chaps wouldn’t it didn’t bother us at all. They just had guards there, no bother at all. We were all completely on our own and of course I eventually got better so I could at least mobile and then the diphtheria started and oh, that’s a horrible disease. And there was another thing I was fortunate. I had the disease too but it didn’t affect me. There was about 30 of us. We were what they called carriers, it didn’t affect us in anyway. The Japs had us in the compound. They treated us like leprosy. We were quite happy there. They didn’t bother us. They were deathly scared of diseases too but that was a horrible . . . poor guy there literally choked to death. Every disease that’s known to man come through there. The strange things happened to you. Your feet wouldn’t work the way you wanted them to work, you start to swell up for no reason and different parts would swell up at different times.