Thank you all for coming here today to join with the Taiwan POW Camps Memorial Society in this important service of remembrance. I would like to pay tribute to the more than 300 brave men who died - right here in this harbour, 60 years ago today - on January 9th 1945, by telling you a little of the...
I am proud to be here today with you to honor the memory of those brave men who lost their lives here 60 years ago in the cause of freedom. Standing here on this warm sunny day in Kaohsiung, looking out at the calm seas and the city of people going about their everyday lives, it’s hard to imagine the horrendous conditions under which the American prisoners of war found themselves 60 years ago today.
On board the 'hell ships' they suffered under...
Taiwan played a significant role in the story of the hellships in World War II. Being a Japanese colony and secure base, it served as a haven for many hellships en route to Japan, as well as a prime destination for POWs being used as slave labour here for the Japanese war effort.
Following the memorial service held in January 2005 by the Taiwan POW Camps Memorial Society to commemorate the bombing of the hellship Enoura Maru in Kaohsiung Harbour, it was suggested that a memorial be built in Taiwan to remember...
This is the story of the Enoura Maru Hellship Memorial from the beginning in 2011 to its eventual dedication on August 15th 2018. Also on the website are the stories of the bombing of the ship, the memorial service held at Kaohsiung Harbour in 2005, and the building and dedication of the Taiwan Hellships Memorial in 2006.
This is the culmination of seven year’s work that was first initiated by the Taiwan POW Camps Memorial Society back in 2011 at the request of some of the family members of the men who had died...
In a letter received in the autumn of 2000, we learned of further atrocities committed against prisoners of war on Taiwan by the Japanese in the closing days of the war.
At that time we received a letter from Mr. Charles D. "Buddy" Parker of Florida, USA asking for assistance in finding more information on his brother who had been executed by the Japanese in Taihoku in June 1945. This was the first time we had heard anything about other POWs being executed. To our knowledge there were only the two POWs...
by Jerome F. Keating Ph.D., Taiwan POW Camps Memorial Society Board Member
Taiwan abounds with historical sites, many of which residents pass by everyday with scant recollection of what went on there. One such place in Taipei is the old north wall of the former Taipei Prison. Located beside the Chunghwa Telecom Building on Chinshan South Road about a block south of Hsinyi Road, this prison served heavy duty during the Japanese period and the subsequent Kuomintang (KMT) White Terror period. Nearby residents still recall hearing the gun shots of executions within the...
FRIENDS,
WE ARE GATHERED TOGETHER AT THIS SPOT TO REMEMBER AND TO REFLECT UPON THE LIVES OF FOURTEEN AMERICANS WHO PERISHED HERE SIXTY YEARS AGO—SIXTY YEARS AGO ON THIS DAY.
IT IS NOT OUR PURPOSE TO DEMEAN THIS OCCASION BY CONDEMNING THOSE RESPONSIBLE FOR THE ACTIONS THAT RESULTED IN THE UNLAWFUL EXECUTION OF THESE MEN. RATHER, WE ARE HERE TO CELEBRATE THE LIVES OF THE FOURTEEN AND TO HONOR THE ROLES THEY PLAYED IN DEFENDING OUR NATION AND IN SPREADING THE CAUSE OF FREEDOM. IN HONORING THESE FOURTEEN, WE ALSO HONOR ALL...