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Description
Mr. Peters describes the environment aboard the ship which took the labour gangs to Japan.
Transcription
When the decision was made to send us to Japan, the Japs all gave us a oh what they’d call a medical. All they did was they’d have a piece of cotton batting up your behind and pull it down and see if it was I guess they didn’t want to take dysentery back or diseases back to Japan. I’m not too sure but I think I was on the second group. There was one group that got torpedoed on the way but no I wasn’t on that I was I think I was on the next allotment. But I guess by that time when I wound up, the group that I was in, when we went, we were, the Japanese were making convoys. We were in Formosa for about three weeks waiting for a convoy to be formed. Oh that was a horrible, it was just a just a great big hole and we didn’t have enough room to sleep. When you’d sleep, you’d sleep partly on top of somebody. At first there was no toilet facilities and we all had, I think we all had diarrhea. It was a real heck of a mess. Eventually the Japs brought down a big barrel looked like a 45 gallon drum and we had to use that as a washroom. And we stunk so bad I think the Japs couldn’t even take it. So they built a sort of a platform off the side of the ship. They made us stand on there and then they would hose us down with a water hose.
We were all in such a, you would look at this guy and there is really nothing there. He was so skinny. It’s hard to visualize how you would have a bunch, a group of people like that down there in the hole. They would never let us out of this bloody hole. You’d stay down their. There’s no life, no nothing. They brought down a bucket of rice, lowered that into the hole and there we had to, we had some sort of a system established to give each man a certain amount of this rice.