Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

AFTER EFFECTS

RESCUED PRISONERS

SLEEPLESS AND NERVY

O.C. SYDNEY, November 22. Mothers of some of the Australian prisoners of war who survived the sinking of the Japanese prison ship in the western Pacific on September 12 say that their sons are suffering from a fear complex. They are nervous and sleepless, have erratic appetites, and seek meals at odd hours.

One Sydney mother said: "The sudden change in conditions has been too much for my son. For over twq years he has not slept on a decent bed. Each night now he goes to bed normally, but next morning we find him huddled on the floor. He had slept huddled on hard floors so Jong he is having difficulty in sleeping in a bed. Yet he tells us that he craved for white sheets and a soft bed while a prisoner." ' ; '

She said her son .iad developed an enormous appetite after years of short rations. "He eats five big meals a" day," she said. "Sometimes he wakes hungry at 2 a.m., but we cook him a meal whenever he wakes. He regards every meal as a kind of miracle that food can,be so good." Another mother said her son preferred ' not to discuss his experiences. "He spends most of his time answering inquiries from relatives of men ,who are still prisoners." she said. "I marvel at his tolerance and patience He never refuses to answer any inquiry. Frequently he is able to give detailed information about their boys We know how these people feel, becuse my husband is still a prisoner of the Japanese."'

, WAITING ON DOORSTEP. Another mother found her exprisoner son on the doorstep when she came home. When she received a telegram saying he was arriving she went to an Army .discharge camp, believing he would arrive there. "At the discharge camp I was told he had been taken home by a staff car," she said. "Scarcely able to restrain myself, I got a taxi home. fWhen I got there the whole street was out to welcome him. The people stood back and let me go to him first. It was an enormously important moment."

She added her son was unsettled and nervy, as a result of his experiences, "At night he walks the house unable to sleep. Sometimes he wakes crying out. We pretend to take no notice of it He is always talking about General Bennett. He tells us that all the boys in Singapore know that Bennett did his utmost for them. They all say that Bennett did not let them downr, but that he was let down."

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19441205.2.86

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXVIII, Issue 135, 5 December 1944, Page 7

Word Count
434

AFTER EFFECTS Evening Post, Volume CXXXVIII, Issue 135, 5 December 1944, Page 7

AFTER EFFECTS Evening Post, Volume CXXXVIII, Issue 135, 5 December 1944, Page 7