Jack Mudie, one time resident of Warrimoo, had a significant part to play in the inauguration of this memorial 'Peace Park' and statues at Naoetsu (Joetsu) in Japan. |
According to his sister, Maisie (later Maisie Lupton), Jack enjoyed the rugged bush life around Warrimoo and helped maintain the flourishing 'swimming hole' in the valley not far from the Mudie household. Jack had studied to become a teacher and
was employed in that capacity at St.
Marys Public
School where he happily worked until the outbreak of World War II. There are no war memorials at Warrimoo because there were not many young men to enlist, but Jack Mudie's story is an outstanding one...
Enlistment
By mid January 1942 it was clear that the Japanese attack would be land based and several encounters with the enemy had already taken place, most resulting in outflanking, defeat, and retreat of the British-led defenders. By late January the strength of the Japanese forces was such that the Australian troops were being withdrawn to the southern end of
Following the complete withdrawal of Allied forces onto Singapore Island, the 2/20th Battalion was positioned defensively in an area adjacent to Johore Strait where the battalion, facing extensive mangrove swamp, took the brunt of the major Japanese assault on the night of February 8, 1942 with more than four hundred casualties. Jack Mudie is recorded in Volume IV of Australia’s official Second World War history (Army) as being one of the 2/20th Battalion’s company commanders at the time of the Japanese landings on that day.
Defenders' view from Singapore Island near the Causeway to the Malayan mainland. The tall building in the distance became General Yamashita's Command Post. |
Stunning pic of Japanese soldiers crossing Johore Strait on outboard-driven boats. |
Japanese naval presence, air superiority and land-based success on the island was unstoppable. The surrender of the British forces on
Captured
The remaining men
of 2/20th Battalion, along with many other Australian, British and Indian
troops became prisoners of war and while many were consigned to spend the next
three and a half years in Singapore’s Changi prison, others were put to work by
the Japanese in one or more of the many working parties sent out from
Singapore. These included the various ‘Forces’ that were assembled to work on
the ‘infamous’ Burma to Thailand railway and the Sandakan
airfield in northern Borneo . There were others
who were transported to Japan
on “hell ships” and then forced to work in coal mines and metal refineries.
As a member of “C Force,” Jack Mudie was among 563 Australian POWs who were sent from
In March 1943 the
prisoners were moved to new temporary quarters in the nearby village of Arita
and in October the camp was again moved to a two-storey warehouse. While at
Naoetsu Jack suffered similar treatment to that depicted in the recent movie,
‘Unbroken’, revealing the abuse of the American ex-Olympic veteran Louis
Zamperini.
Jack too, endured endless taunts, starvation, savage beatings and
other cruelties from camp guards…
I saw and experienced a lot of cruelty and
starvation… I came back a physical wreck…On one occasion a few of us were
pulled out of the sleeping quarters to provide entertainment for the Japanese
soldiers. We had to crawl around like dogs while getting belted until we
collapsed…I lost about three kilograms that night.[2]
During his time
as a POW Jack Mudie kept a diary which was later used as evidence in war trials
against the Naoetsu Japanese soldiers and guards who were indicted for crimes
against the POWs.
Return Home…
When the war ended and Jack returned to Warrimoo to his sister Maisie Lupton’s care, he was a shadow of his former vigorous self…
When the war ended and Jack returned to Warrimoo to his sister Maisie Lupton’s care, he was a shadow of his former vigorous self…
American Airmen Find a Camp
Lieut. Jack Mudie, who before his enlistment with
the A.I.F. was on the teaching staff of St Marys Public School, was a very
welcome visitor to the “Nepean
Times” office on Tuesday. He was with the 2/20th Battalion when Singapore fell and for the past three years has
been a prisoner in Japan .
He looks well, though hardly at the poundage of pre-war days. He speaks
appreciatively of Red Cross comforts when they arrived, which was not too
often. The Japs claimed that in the air raid period the bombing was responsible
for parcels not getting through. The location of the camp in which Lieut. Mudie
was a prisoner was for a time unknown to the Allied forces but eventually they
were spotted by American B29’s who thereafter dropped large quantities of supplies
to them till they were released. Lieut. Mudie returned to Sydney on one of H.M.S. aircraft carriers
with 42 other Australian officers. Also on the carrier were a number of British
refugees from Hong Kong . Lieut. Mudie, who is
at present staying with his sister, Mrs Lupton of Warrimoo, wishes to thank
many friends who have been kindly inquiring about him.[3]
It took
some time for Jack to recover his physical and mental stability. He was
discharged from the army on November 12, 1945 and as part of his recuperation treatment he
travelled to Canberra ,
where he met a nurse from the hospital, Neno Dorothy Wearne. They were soon
married and looking for a home further afield from Warrimoo, at Baulkham Hills.
But that was not the end of Jack Mudie’s story.
Aftermath
Being an educated
man, Jack Mudie wrote nineteen poems depicting life in and around the prison
camp. These were published in 1999 as a monograph titled “And Gum Trees Nodding
Under Azure Skies,” with the first stanza of the book’s title poem beginning:
"The
last of winter's snow still clings
Upon
the distant slopes;
But
spring has brought the warmer days
To
brighten up our hopes."
He also wrote
of the Japanese working women:
“Women toiling
Everywhere,
Always doing
Double share
Sometimes dragging
Heavy carts
Human horses
Lions' hearts.”
Subsequently
it was found that Naoetsu was one of the worst WWII Japanese prison camps in
their whole system, having a per capita death rate higher than any other. Sixty
of the Australian POWs in the camp died before the remainder were rescued by Allied
forces in September 1945. Mr Mudie wrote the following lines in memory of those
sixty Australians who died, overworked and underfed, in the sweat-hole at Naoetsu:
"With
head bowed down, I murmur one last prayer,
To those I
leave upon this foreign soil;
Whose frames
consumed by cruelty and by toil,
Will never
more breathe sweet Australian air.
When days
were grey, their tired yet steadfast eyes
Would turn
to golden sands and rolling plains,
To wheat
fields kissed by gentle summer rains,
And gum
trees nodding under azure skies.
But now they
dwell with dreams in realms of thought
Where Halls
of Dawn are filled with angels’ song.
While we
enjoy the freedom that they sought,
To bear the
fiery torch they passed along.
God grant
you peace, you souls who now are free
To join your
forebears in Gallipoli.
After the
war, at the Yokohama
trials, fifteen Japanese ex-soldiers and camp guards of the Naoetsu Camp were
found guilty of war crimes against the POWs. Eight of them were executed. Jack
had played his part by providing clear evidence of the culprits, but one of the
worst offenders, Corporal (later Sergeant) Mutsuhiro Watanabe, strangely evaded
capture and punishment, despite his whereabouts being no particular secret.[4]
The Peace Memorial Park , Naoetsu ,
Japan
In 1978 a letter from an Australian ex-prisoner of war of the Japanese established a correspondence with some students learning English in Naoetsu, Japan. In 1988, at the former site of the Naoetsu prison camp a memorial service was held for the sixty Australian POWs who had died there during the Second World War. Those attending the ceremony were told about the Japanese POWs who were killed in the breakout at Cowra in central New South Wales in 1944 and about their reverent burial in the Cowra war cemetery. Six years later a group of local Japanese people who had heard this story formed a committee which aimed to erect peace statues at Naoetsu. In spite of many obstacles they succeeded in erecting the statues and two cenotaphs at the former camp site that had been transformed into a garden called “The Peace Memorial Park.”
Mr Mudie gave an inspiring speech on behalf of the surviving Australian POWs, which included the following excerpts:
“Today is
indeed a very historic day …. today when a demonstration is made to all the
nation that a community like you wonderful people of Joetsu can establish out
of the dark days of the prison that was once here, a garden that will shine
like a beacon for years and years with peace and good will.”
“If you have
children, bring them here to this park often. Tell them that this land now
belongs to the people. Tell them that there once stood here a prison camp where
300 Australian soldiers were brutally treated, not because they did anything
wrong but because they were men from another nation. And tell them that out of
those dark days this garden has been built as a sign to all people everywhere that war must not
come again…….”
“Look at
these two flags. The flag of Japan
has the sun on it. The flag of Australia
has the stars. Between them day and night are united, which reminds us that the
pledge we are making today will continue on through night and day for all time
without ceasing…..”
“If our
hearts are full of love, there will be no room for hatred. If our hearts are
full of peace, there is no room for thoughts of war. If you visit Australia ,
we will welcome you from the bottom of our hearts as our friends.”
Mr Mudie spent
his final years living at Coal Point with his daughter Jennifer Walsh.
He is survived
by daughters Lynette and Jennifer, son Raymond and their children.
He will be
missed by the Newcastle Ex-Prisoner of War Association and all who knew
him. He has honored the name of 'Warrimoo' by spending his early life here. May he rest in eternal peace.
[1] The vast
bulk of this entry is taken from an Obituary and Tribute to Jack Mudie by David
H. Dial, OAM, the Honorary Military Historian of the Newcastle Ex-Prisoner Of
War Association, delivered on March 2, 2007, and published in ‘Hunter River
Forums’ by ‘Digger Dave’ on March 17th, 2007. Other, additional
references are listed below, according to their source.
[2] TROVE. ‘Newcastle Herald’,
September 6, 2006. ‘Sacrifices Honoured’
by Anita Beaumont
[3] TROVE. ‘Nepean Times’, October 4,
1945. ‘American Airmen Find Camp’
[4]
WIKIPEDIA: https://en.wikipedia.org>wiki>Mutsuhiro_Watanabe
* Warrimoo Historians would like to proffer an apology for the poor quality of the picture of Jack Mudie. We would desperately have loved to have had a clearer portrait photo of Jack, but could not glean any. If any blog reader could help out, please let us know in the 'Comments' section.
* Warrimoo Historians would like to proffer an apology for the poor quality of the picture of Jack Mudie. We would desperately have loved to have had a clearer portrait photo of Jack, but could not glean any. If any blog reader could help out, please let us know in the 'Comments' section.
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