80 Years Later: Bataan Death March POWs Deserve Commemorating

80 Years Later: Bataan Death March POWs Deserve Commemorating
This picture, captured from the Japanese, shows American prisoners using improvised litters to carry those of their comrades who, from the lack of food or water on the march from Bataan, fell along the road, in the Philippines, in May 1942. U.S. Marine Corps/Archives.gov, Public Domain
Kinue Tokudome
Updated:
0:00
Commentary

On April 9, 1942, the United States experienced its largest military surrender, followed by the infamous Bataan Death March. Around 76,000 American and Filipino soldiers, already weakened by months of fighting on the Bataan Peninsula in the Philippines with no supplies, were taken as POWs by the Japanese. They were then forced to march 65 miles to a prison camp, where thousands perished along the way.

Dr. Lester Tenney, a survivor of the Bataan Death March, was a dear friend of mine who passed away in 2017. On this anniversary, I remember the moving speech he delivered in 2000 at a memorial service held at the Commonwealth War Cemetery in Yokohama, Japan:
We are gathered here today to pay tribute to the soldiers, sailors, and marines who served their countries honorably and died a needless death at the peak of their lives. The greatest honor we can pay our fallen comrades is to be here today, acknowledging the hell they endured during Japan’s brief victory in WWII.”

This cemetery is the final resting place for POWs from Commonwealth countries who were captured in Southeast Asia and Hong Kong and sent to Japan as forced laborers. Of the more than 35,000 Allied POWs forced to work for Japanese companies supporting Japan’s war efforts, 10 percent perished due to harsh working conditions.

Among those buried here are 1,036 British, 278 Australians, 137 Canadians, 40 Indians, and a few others.
While the remains of over 1,100 American and 850 Dutch POWs were repatriated, a small shrine within the cemetery holds the ashes of 48 American and 21 Dutch POWs. This makes the cemetery a symbolic site representing all nations whose POWs died in Japan. The cemetery is maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, headquartered in England.

Notably, the 2000 memorial service was organized not by the Japanese government but by a devoted group of Japanese citizens. They invited Dr. Tenney, who had endured forced labor in a Japanese coal mine, to speak.

Dr. Tenney’s postwar journey was never easy. On Sept. 2, 1945, while the official surrender ceremony took place aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, just-liberated American POWs were instructed by the U.S. government not to disclose their experiences as POWs in Japan to anyone. Dr. Tenney followed that order for over 50 years.

At the Yokohama cemetery, he was finally able to pay tribute to his fellow POWs who did not return home alive:

“You have made the final sacrifice while showing your deep sense of responsibility and dedication to protecting, defending, and promoting your country’s highest values.”

For the next 17 years, until his passing at age 96, Dr. Tenney tirelessly worked to ensure that the history of POWs was never forgotten. He frequently traveled to Japan, speaking to young people and emphasizing the importance of learning from the past to build new friendships.

In 2015, the late Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe invited Dr. and Mrs. Tenney to a dinner he hosted in Washington, D.C., where he thanked Dr. Tenney for his dedication to remembrance and reconciliation.

Dr. Tenney’s vision lives on. With the 80th anniversary of the end of World War II approaching, the significance of remembrance, reconciliation, and reaffirming the strong ties forged among former adversaries since the war’s end has never been more important.

Recently, I returned to the cemetery in Yokohama with former Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, whose father was also a POW of Japan. As we walked among the rows of grave markers, we saw countless names and ages of young men who lost their lives in Japan—most in their 20s and 30s.

Mr. Downer’s father, who later served as Australia’s ambassador to the UK, could have been among them had he been sent to Japan instead of a POW camp in Singapore.

Despite the cemetery’s beauty and solemn significance, we noticed that few people in Japan know of its existence.

Dr. Tenney’s words at the cemetery 25 years ago, as an American Jewish survivor of WWII, remain profoundly relevant today:

“We fervently pray that hate—hate of any kind and for any reason—will vanish from every country on earth and that all people will be able to live in peace.

“I have learned something today, as we stand here surrounded by so many concerned people: We are all one family, all interested and caring, all prepared and ready to deal with events of great importance to every person around the world.”

The 80th anniversary of the end of WWII offers an excellent opportunity for Japan and former Allied nations to reflect on the history of POWs and reaffirm the strong bond and friendship they have built over the past eight decades, grounded in shared democratic values.

A commemorative event should be held at the Commonwealth War Cemetery in Yokohama, Japan, on Sept. 2 to honor Allied POWs held by the Japanese. A high-profile delegation led by President Trump, the Japanese Prime Minister, and representatives from Commonwealth countries should attend, highlighting their enduring commitment to peace.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Kinue Tokudome
Kinue Tokudome
Author
Kinue Tokudome is a Japanese writer and a longtime supporter of former American POWs held by Japan during WWII.