Stanley Internment Camp
The Stanley Internment Camp was a civilian internment camp in Hong Kong during World War II. Located in Stanley, on the southern end of Hong Kong Island, it was used by the Japanese imperial forces to hold non-Chinese enemy nationals after their victory in the Battle of Hong Kong. About 2,800 men, women, and children were held at the non-segregated camp for 44 months from early January of 1942 to 1945-08-16, the day the Japanese forces surrendered.[1] The camp area consisted of the grounds of St. Stephen's College and the grounds of Stanley Prison, excluding the prison itself.[2]
Evacuation
In 1939, the British government had drawn up evacuation plans for the British and other European residents of Hong Kong. It was thought that the city would inevitably fall to Japanese forces in the event of an attack, so it should not be reinforced with more defensive forces. In July of 1940, the colonial government of Hong Kong received orders from the UK to proceed with the evacuations. By 3 August, all service families and registered non-service British women and children had been moved to the Philippines.[3] However, the hurried evacuations and it's compulsory nature prompted criticism from the husbands and employers of evacuees and would-be evacuees. It angered the local Chinese population as well, which charged that the plans were racist because it did not include Chinese people for evacuation. The government subsequently made the evacuations non-compulsory. Existing evacuations ordered were cancelled provided that the evacuees volunteered for duty in an auxiliary service.[3]
Arriving at camp
On 1941-12-08, Japanese forces attacked Hong Kong, starting the Battle of Hong Kong. Seventeen days later, on Christmas Day of 1941, which came to be known as "Black Christmas", the Hong Kong government surrendered. On 1942-01-04, a notice appeared in an English-language newspaper that all "enemy nationals" were to assemble on Murray Parade Grounds. Many people did not see the notice, but about 1,000 people were eventually gathered on the grounds.[4] In addition to those that gathered voluntarily, there were people who were forcibly removed from their homes as well.[5]
The people assembled were marched to and interned in hotel-brothels on the waterfront near the present-day location of the Macau Ferry Pier. The condition there was dirty and overcrowded, and the food was poor. After 17 days, the internees were taken by boat to Stanley. Upon arrival at camp, the internees discovered that little was prepared for them there. The facilities were inadequate and dirty, the rooms soon became overcrowded with random assortments of people that were unrelated to each other, and little attention was paid to hygiene or public health.[6]
Camp grounds
The Stanley site was chosen by the Japanese through consultation with two Hong Kong government officials — Dr. P. S. Selwyn-Clarke, Director of Medical Services, and F. C. Gimson, the Colonial Secretary.[6] The camp consisted of St. Stephen's College and the grounds of Stanley Prison, excluding the prison itself. Several hundred internees lived at St. Stephen's, while the majority of them lived on the prison grounds.
Certain buildings and areas on the prison grounds had specific functions:
- The Prison Officers' Club was used for multiple functions; it was used as a canteen, a kindergarten, Catholic church, and recreation centre.[2]
- Two main divisions of quarters existed — the Warders' Quarters and the Indian Quarters. Before the war, the Warders' Quarters housed European warders, with large flats designed for a famiy each, and the Indian Quarters housed Indian prison guards, built with smaller flats. An average of 30 internees lived in a flat at the Warders' Quarters, and an average of six internees lived in a flat at the Indian Quarters.[7]
- A building which had housed single Indian warders before the war was turned into a hospital called Tweed Bay Hospital.[8]
- Two houses, originally used as homes for the prison superintendent and the prison doctor, were turned into the Japanese headquarters for the camp.[8]
- The cemetary on the grounds became a popular spot for quiet relaxation as well as a place for intimate meetings between male and female internees.[8]
Life at camp
The internees numbered at 2,800, where an estimated 2,325 to 2,514 were British. The adult population numbered at 1,370 men and 858 women, and children 16 years of age or younger numbered at 286, with 99 of whom below the age of four.[6] According to internee Geoffrey Charles Emerson, the Japanese forces had not made plans for dealing with enemy civilians in Hong Kong. As such, the camp was provided with few necessities, and the internees were left to govern the camp themselves.[9] Committees were formed for such matters as housing, food, medical care, etc., with the three main national groups at camp, the Americans, the British, and the Dutch remaining mostly independent of each other except for matters of welfare and medical care. Very few government servants were selected to serve on these committees, as there was anti-government sentiments at camp; most internees blamed the government for the quick surrender of Hong Kong.[9]
The biggest concern at camp was food, and ensuring there was enough food occupied most of the internees' time. Little food was provided by the Japanese authorities and the quality of the food was poor. It frequently contained dust, mud, rat and cockroach excreta, cigarette ends, and sometimes even dead rats. Everyday, the internees were served rice congee at 8 a.m., and then meals consisting of rice with stew at both 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. Additionally, they also relied on food mailed from friends or relatives in the city, Red Cross aid, a canteen where they may buy food, garden-grown vegetables, and the black market.[10]
Another concern was the health and medical care of the internees. Although medical facilities was inadequate, the internees counted amongst them about 40 doctors, two dentists, six pharmacists, 100 trained nurses,[11] and a large number of volunteer auxiliary nurses.[12] Because of this, no major epidemic occured. The most common sickness amongst the internees were malaria, malnutrition and its associated diseases, beriberi, and pellagra. The shortage of medical supplies and equipment posed a challenge for those in charge of medical care, with the lack of soap and disinfectant being a particularly troublesome concern.[11]
The women and children contributed to a sense of normality at camp as their presense provided conventional social, family, and gender relations. The internees believed that the presense of the children made them less selfish, as it forced them to think of the welfare of the children.[6] The women organised Christmas and birthday celebrations,[13] and other diversions such as musicals, plays, recitals, and variety shows were also staged. Although the camp lacked books and educational equipment, the teachers and educational administrators amongst the internees were able to provide lessons for the children at the primary and secondary levels. Additionally, there was also extensive adult education for the adults at camp.[14]
References
- ^ Bernice Archer and Kent Fedorowich. "The women of stanley: internment in Hong Kong 1942–45" (PDF). Women's History Review. 5 (3): 374. doi:10.1080/09612029600200119. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ^ a b Geoffrey Charles Emerson (1977). "Behind Japanese Barbed Wire: Stanley Internment Camp, Hong Kong 1942–1945" (PDF). Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society. 17: 31. Retrieved 2007-05-13.
- ^ a b Archer and Fedorowich; page 376
- ^ Emerson; page 30
- ^ "War prisoner's quest for justice". BBC News. 2005-07-07. Retrieved 2007-05-23.
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(help) - ^ a b c d Archer and Fedorowich; page 379
- ^ Emerson; pages 31-32
- ^ a b c Emerson; page 32
- ^ a b Emerson; page 33
- ^ Emerson; page 34
- ^ a b Archer and Fedorowich; page 384
- ^ Archer and Fedorowich; page 381
- ^ Archer and Fedorowich; page 390
- ^ Emerson; page 39