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Jack Edwards (Hong Kong) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jack Edwards (Hong Kong)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jack Edwards, at the time 79 years old, flew a Union Jack flag at half-staff in September 1997 from his 27th-floor flat to mark the death of Princess Diana.
Jack Edwards, at the time 79 years old, flew a Union Jack flag at half-staff in September 1997 from his 27th-floor flat to mark the death of Princess Diana.

Jack Edwards, OBE (traditional Chinese: 艾華士, 24 May 1918 - 13 August 2006), was a former British World War II army sergeant and a POW survivor, most well known for his dedicated efforts of tracking down Japanese war criminals and the relentless determination displayed in defending the rights of Hong Kong war veterans.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Jack Edwards was born in Cardiff, Wales on 24 May 1918.

[edit] Army

Edwards was an army sergeant in the Royal Corps of Signals when Singapore fell to the Japanese in February 1942. He was interned for some time by the Japanese in the notorious Changi jail before transported to the then Japanese colony of Taiwan. Edwards was put into the Kinkaseki POW camp, a mountainous region near Jiufen, where he and 526 other inmates were forced to work the copper mine daily in tropical heat. His team was required to bring out 24 bogeys of copper every single day, if not, they were then beaten. Only 64 survived when the Japanese finally surrendered in 1945. He and others were so emaciated that their eyes were sunken and their bodies mere skeletons of their former selves. He was rescued by US Marines who later made him an honorary Marine.

[edit] After World War II

Edwards spent a year recuperating in the Britain, then in 1946 he returned to the Far East to help in the apprehension of Japanese war criminals and to give evidence at their trials. While visiting Kinkaseki he found Document No. 2701 — the only surviving copy of the Japanese order to massacre all prisoners of war if the Allies landed on the Japanese home islands — and an important piece of evidence at the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal.[1]

On his return to South Wales Edwards worked in local government. There, he felt an active discouragement from talking about the horrors he experienced as a POW. Unable to settle, he left for Hong Kong in 1963. Edwards took up a post as a housing officer in the housing department of the Hong Kong administration. Later, he became a senior housing manager for Hongkong Land. There, he was actively involved in the Hong Kong Ex-Servicemen's Association as well as the Royal British Legion, becoming later on its chairman.

[edit] Life as a campaigner

Through his dogged, tireless efforts as the chairman of the Royal British Legion (Hong Kong and China branch) Edwards, in 1991, succeeded in winning monthly pension awards from the British government to ethnic Chinese veterans and their widows.

A greater feat of triumph came in 1997 when Edwards fought and won the granting of British citizenship to wives and widows of those veterans.

He spoke out for the many in Hong Kong who during the occupation, had been forced to sell their businesses as well as property to the Japanese in exchange for the worthless Japanese military yen.

[edit] Personal life

Edwards's first marriage ended because of the war. In 1990, he married Polly Tam So-lan, a former member of a Chinese People's Liberation Army dance troupe whom he met in the 1970s. They lived in a flat in Sha Tin in the New Territories. Both he and Polly loved dancing by practising to the tunes of Taiwanese songs in their small living-room. Edwards spoke fluent Cantonese. He is survived by his wife and her daughter by her first marriage.

[edit] Trivia

  • It took him 45 years to write his book Banzai You Bastards!.
  • The first translator of his book, the Japanese journalist Shinji Nagino, was murdered in Montreal with two-thirds of the way to go.
  • After being requested by Diana, Princess of Wales to find the grave of Major-General Merton Beckwith-Smith, the father of Princess Diana's lady-in-waiting who had died as a POW in Japan, Edwards managed to locate it.[2]
  • In 1981 the National Film Board of Canada released A War Story: Based on the Diaries of Dr. Ben Wheeler, the Canadian doctor in the Kinkasekihe camp. Jack Edwards was a featured commentator in the film, along with several other former POWs who were interviewed in the documentary.
  • In 2000, a memorial was erected in Kinkaseki to which Edwards returned for the second time with the help of a grant of £10,000 from the British Government.
  • Edwards and his other POW survivors escaped impending death at the hands of their Japanese captors by a mere two days due to the dropping of the two American atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
  • When American aircraft began to drop supplies into Edwards' POW camp near the end of the war, several POWs and civilians were killed by the supplies which were dropped too low for their parachutes to work. Edwards was the only one to know flag semaphore in the camp as he had learned it in the Boys' Brigade. As Edwards frantically signalled "Don't Drop" the American aircraft circling overhead was about to drop supplies on top of him until the crew realised Edwards' signals. Interestingly, there was only one crew member on the aircraft who could read semaphore and he had learned it in the Boy Scouts of America.

[edit] Quotes

The Allies rebuilt Japan and Germany and Italy. Nobody rebuilt our lives. The tears and nightmares will remain 'til death. I'm willing to forgive. None of us should forget.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jack Edwards and Jimmy Walter. Banzi you Bastards!. Souvenir Press Ltd., 257-261. ISBN 028563027X. 
  2. ^ Jack Edwards Obituary. Times Online (2006-08-15). Retrieved on 2008-02-05.
  3. ^ Edwards and Walter, p. 264.

[edit] Further reading

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