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Hanno Spoelstra 15-08-22 16:30

VJ Day 77th anniversary
 
1 Attachment(s)
Today is the 77th anniversary of the end of World War 2. #VJDay always triggers the recollection of what my late father’s family had to go through. Lest we forget!

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hanno Spoelstra (Post 261640)
An exposition about the MS Oranje (see link below) triggered a recollection of my late father, Rob Spoelstra. He lived in the Netherlands East-Indies (now Indonesia) from 1931-1945. After V-J Day, he fled from a Japanese interment camp and went looking for his father, mother and sister. Note: his family was separated: his father was in a mens camp, his mother and sister in a women and children camp. At 12 years of age, he was taken away from his mother and put in a boys only camp.

So, in August 1945 they hear the war is over and as a 14 year old boy my father and a friend decide to go and find their family. They had some letters via the Red Cross so they had a clue where they could be, not knowing if they were still alive. They traded some clothes for a couple of goose eggs, made a knapsack and crawled under the barbed wire and headed in the direction of their father's camp.

Out on the road they were stopped by a Japanese patrol (who were now tasked with protecting the Dutch against the Indonesians). They were about to be taken back to the camp, when a column of British-Indian Army trucks passed by. A British officer asked what was happening and after his explanation, my father and his friend were taken along by the British-Indian troops as they were heading in the direction of their father’s camp.
My father told me they “drove in trucks with peculiar back-slanted windows”, identifying them as Cab 13 CMP trucks. My father told me this story when I first showed him my Ford F15A CMP.

Luckily, my father was reunited with his father, mother and sister and they were repatriated to the Netherlands very much in the same was as can be seen in the link below.

https://www.facebook.com/24315614237...61874503832943
Attachment 129750


Ed Storey 15-08-22 22:09

VJ Day
 
The end of the SWW certainly saw the mass movement of people as borders were redrawn and old empires were dismantled. New empires were created out of the ashes of the war, and I think 77 years later we are once again seeing a shift in international power dynamics.

Hanno Spoelstra 15-08-22 22:51

It is a never ending story, Ed. We as humans seem to have a bad collective memory and some of us let their hunger for power, money, resources, etc prevail.

Sad, but true.


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