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Burma: A Soldier's Campaign in 20 Objects (Paperback)
Loot Price: R386
Discovery Miles 3 860
You Save: R89
(19%)
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Burma: A Soldier's Campaign in 20 Objects (Paperback)
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List price R475
Loot Price R386
Discovery Miles 3 860
You Save R89 (19%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Captain John Alexander served in the Royal Engineers and was posted
to the 17th Indian Division, known as the Black Cats, which was
sent into Burma against the Japanese as part of the 14th Army.
John's unit was 60 Indian Field Company. After the capture of Hong
Kong and the fall of Singapore in February 1942 the Japanese army
advanced into Burma, catching the Allies ill-equipped and
unprepared. Rangoon fellin March, thus beginning a long fighting
retreat by the Allies through thick jungle to the northwest
frontier with India. But the Allies regrouped and fought back, and
in 1944 fierce fighting, culminating in the battles of the Admin
Box, Kohima and Imphal, caused the Japanese forces to begin to
withdraw. At the beginning of 1945 the 14th Army launched a
successful offensive pushing the Japanese southwards before them.
Mandalay was retaken and then Rangoon in May 1945. The Japanese
Army finally surrendered on 15 August 1945. Many histories of the
Burma Campaign have been written, and the terrible conditions of
jungle warfare against a brutal enemy are well known. John
Alexander returned home on leave before the end of the conflict
with his body weakened by fever, jungle sores and dysentery, and
his mind affected by what we now call PTSD. But he also brought
back with him a collection of 'souvenirs' from the campaign -
artefacts that range from Japanese currency and cigarettes to
letters, swords, a bayonet, sketches, and his own diaries, letters
and decorations. This book will be a reflection on the personal
stories behind this terrible and often forgotten war, looking at
the conflict both from a British and a Japanese perspective.
Through an examination of these artefacts, the horror and humanity
of the combatants who took part in this far-away conflict will be
vividly brought to life.
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