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Canadian
and British prisoners of war awaiting
liberation by landing party from
H.M.C.S. Prince Robert,
Hong Kong, 30 August 1945. |
| Photo
by Jack Hawes. Department of National
Defence / National Archives of
Canada, PA-114811. |
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I don't know if everybody expected us to
be only 85 pounds and be wearing rags, but
when we came to Canada they treated us like
we were in cotton batting. They meant well,
and I guess it was right that we should
be grateful. Think of it, not everybody
had spent one-sixth of their life in a Japanese
prison camp. I was twenty when Hong Kong
was captured and I was twenty-four when
we got home.
Everything was a blur. I mean that. We
didn't eat much but potato soup with some
fish in it, but we stole more than our share
of rice, and the Americans who first had
us looked after us pretty well, so when
I got home, I was in pretty fair shape.
Except I was very nervous and I would cry
sometimes over little things, and I didn't
know what was happening. Canada was a changed
place. The people were different, it seemed.
I remember coming home on the train. I
don't know if we were the first Grenadiers
to come home but they treated us pretty
good and some reporters and photographers
got on our coach at Brandon and rode with
us to Winnipeg and it was one long string
of asking questions and taking pictures
and I was afraid. I don't know why, but
I didn't say anything. Then this photographer
came back and he said he'd done something
wrong with his camera and he'd like to take
another picture and I broke down and started
to cry. The photographer looked like a nice
guy and it was smoothed over.
Then we got into Winnipeg, the station
across from the Fort Carry. I used to play
in the old fort in the park there when I
was a kid. I'd joined up when I was nineteen.
I think there were lots of people in the
station. Maybe the mayor, for all I know.
What I should be telling you now, if I
can, is that I had a wife too, but I didn't
know what she looked like. I mean I wasn't
sure. The Japs had taken away our wallets
and things and when I got mine back, or
maybe it was my paybook, her picture was
gone. Her name was Mary. We'd had a few
dates. I couldn't afford much. We'd go bowling,
five pins, and then have a Denver sandwich,
and then I'd walk her to her boarding house
and that would be it. Three weeks before
I went to Hong Kong we got married, and
I was afraid I wouldn't know what she looked
like. I don't think my brain was working
all that well.
I guess I should say that I didn't really
know her. Hadn't heard from her, you see.
We got no mail. A couple of guys did, but
the Japs always seemed to lose mine.
I can't remember much about the station.
Maybe there was a ceremony. There were a
lot of people moving around and then, just
like that, I hear this voice, say, "Hello,
Johnny." I turn around and there she
is, and it's not the girl I thought it would
be, because I honestly couldn't remember.
It was all a blur.
You know what I did? I'm not kidding. I
shook her hand. Like that, I shook her hand.
She was a little thing.
I remember her saying, "C'mon, Johnny,
we're going home. Have you got your bag?"
and I had a little bag and I picked it up
and walked out. It was October. The sun
was shining. I remember that. About eleven
in the morning. I could stretch this out
and tell you other things, but all I remember
is, I was crying and a taxi guy jumps out
and opens the door and we get in. I couldn't
remember if I'd been in a taxi in the past
four or five years, but if I had I guess
it was in Victoria or Vancouver. Wherever
we landed. I can't, I don't think I can
remember.
It was just a short trip, a few blocks.
She just held my hand, and I must have just
held hers and wiped my eyes with the other,
with a hankie, and then we got out at the
Garrick Hotel. I don't know if it is still
there, but it was a funny little place.
Little but tall, and we got out and she
said, "Here's home for now, Johnny,"
and I got out and I remember when we were
walking up the first flight of stairs the
taxi driver comes charging up and he's got
my bag. I'd left it. There was nothing in
it anyway. I had nothing, just army stuff.
Not even a gift. When he got to us he held
out the bag to Mary and he squeezed my arm,
right here where the muscle is, and he said,
"Everything's gonna be fine. You wait
and see." I'll always remember that
guy.
We got to the room, just an ordinary hotel
room in an ordinary hotel, you might say.
It wasn't even a good room. A 2-dollar room,
I'd say. I did some dumb things, like going
to the dusty window and making knots-and-crosses
in the dust, playing a game with myself,
I asked her how her dad was and she said
fine. I think I wasn't crying any more.
Hell, this was 30 years ago. How can I remember
everything?
I sat down on the bed and she went to her
bag and brought out a bottle of Johnny Walker
Red Label. Never forget it. She held it
up and said, "You're home, Johnny.
Johnny's home," and I got up and hugged
her. That was the first time. I think, honestly,
that that was when she just started to get
through to me. That she just wasn't some
little girl who had picked me up in the
station.
I said we weren't altogether right. We
looked okay, 150 pounds, new haircut, new
uniforms, the medals we'd earned, and I
guess I had about 3,000 bucks back pay coming
and enough for a start, but we weren't right.
We weren't right emotionally. We weren't
ready for our wives. Know that?
I poured myself a drink and one for Mary
and another and another and in about an
hour we had finished the bottle. I mean
I had. She had a couple, maybe three. Then
I took off my tunic and lay down on the
bed and zonk, that was it. Out. Before I
went under I saw Mary taking off her blouse
and her little skirt and she lay down beside
me and she held me.
That was the start of my coming back to
the world. I can't put it any other way.
It took a long time and I was terrified
a lot, but that was the start and that was
it. The start.
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