Ambon : the truth about one of the most brutal POW camps in World War II and the triumph of the Aussie spirit / Roger Maynard. Truth about one of the most brutal POW camps in World War II and the triumph of the Aussie spirit. Ambon : the truth about one of the most brutal prisoner of war camps in World War II and the triumph of the Aussie spirit

Collection type Library
Author Maynard, Roger, author.;
Call Number 940.547252 M471a
Document type Monograph
Year 2014.
Pagination xvii, 334 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 24 cm.
Publisher Hachette Australia,
Note Includes bibliographical references (pages 305-319) and index. Brutality, survival, courage and mateship in Ambon - a place of nightmares. In February 1942 the Indonesian island of Ambon fell to the might of the advancing Japanese war machine. Among the captured Allied forces was a unit of 1150 Australian soldiers known as Gull Force, who had been sent to defend the island a strategy doomed from the very beginning.Several hundred Australians were massacred in cold blood soon after the Japanese invasion. But it was only the start of a catalogue of horrors for the men who survived: incarcerated, beaten and often tortured by their captors, the brutality they endured lasted for the next three and a half years. And in this hellhole of despair and evil, officers and men turned against each other as discipline and morale b roke down. Yet their epic struggle also produced heroic acts of kindness and bravery. Just over 300 of these gallen men lived to tell of those grim days behind barbed wire. In Ambon, survivors speak of not just the horrors, but of the courage, endurance a nd mateship that helped them survive. The story of Ambon is one of both the depravity and of memories long buried - but also the triumph of the human spirit. It has not been widely told - until now.
Place made Sydney, NSW :

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