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On April 23, 2005, the Memorial opened the special exhibit,
Behind Barbed Wire: Japanese Internment Camps in the Philippines, 1941-1945.
This exhibits recounts the poignant story of the men, women and children who
lived through one of the darkest periods of history and honors them and the
soldiers and civilians who saved them.
The exhibition, on display through
February 28, 2006, examines the Philippines before the Japanese invasion and
what characterized life for both the native Filipinos and the foreign-born
residents. Focusing on the three major internment camps, Santo Tomás, Los Baños
and Baguio, the exhibition offers insight into the internees’ initial contact
with their captors and their daily lives during confinement. Some succumbed to
death while others with the help of the Filipino civilians and their own sheer
will were able to survive until their eventual liberation in February of 1945.
The rescue missions were carried out by the brave soldiers of
the 1st Cavalry Division, 11th
Airborne Division, 37th Infantry Division and 44th
Tank Battalion of the United States Army. A narrative of their perilous journeys
and successful release of the internees are highlighted in the exhibit.
The exhibit includes many original artifacts donated or loaned by former
internees that convey a variety of emotions: Mrs. Irene Miller Browning’s
jewelry that her husband painstakingly made for her while they were both
interned reveals a husband’s love for his wife. A green bean bag frog owned by
Caroline Bailey Pratt when she was a child interned in Santo Tomas. The frog,
now flat, was torn open and the beans rationed for dinner during the family’s
internment. Jack Bateman’s hand made Boy Scout shorts he wore while interned,
and Karen Kerns Lewis’ hand made paper dolls. These reveal a mother and father’s
wish to raise their children as normally as possible while in a fearful and
horrible environment.
The binoculars used by legendary guerrilla fighter "Chick"
Parsons’ and an 11th Airborne Division soldier’s uniform
reminds us of the battles against the enemy. In addition to these artifacts,
World War II Japanese military items, World War II civilian Filipino items, U.S.
military insignia and flags are displayed. These items as well as memorable
photographs, and original documents vividly capture the complete story of
Japanese internment camps in the Philippines and give us tangible evidence that
truly interprets the internees’ experiences.
Behind Barbed Wire: Japanese Internment Camps in the Philippines, 1941-1945
gives new meaning to the words sacrifice and freedom, and provides a deeper
appreciation and understanding of the United States’ shared history and
relationship with the Philippines.

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MacArthur Report Index
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