Eaten by the Japanese


Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.

LOOKING TO PLACE A BULK ORDER?CLICK HERE

About The Book

<p>As far as we know this is the only surviving full-length memoir by an Indian Prisoner of War of the Japanese of an important but mostly hidden story of World War II: how Indian soldiers in the British Indian Army became Prisoners of War and were shipped by their Japanese captors in torture ships to New Britain and New Guinea and how a fraction of them including the author survived 3 1/2 years of horrific imprisonment beatings starvation bombings--and in a few cases being made a meal of--and more to return home to India.<br><br>It also offers some clues as to why tens of thousands of Indian Army personnel preferred to be prisoners of war of the Japanese risking death and torture rather than join the Japanese-inspired and managed Indian National Army which promised better treatment by the Japanese.<br><br>John Baptist Crasta's story written shortly after the war was published 51 years later when he was 87 years old (2 years before his death) by his son who had only recently discovered the manuscript. Indeed it was by reading his father's memoir that the son not only discovered his father; but decided to do all he could to make the world know about it. This book contains not just the father's memoir but the son's essays about rediscovering his father and his feelings about the memoir. The book has moved senior Indian army officers to tears and is now slowly becoming a source for histories of the period.<br><br>A classic in military history telling the story of men trapped in a world of torture starvation and death-Roger Mansell War historian in Tameme Magazine<br><br>You see the horror of war without a trace of artifice through the eyes of one who was there the writing a simple act of catharsis. A war memoir that ranks with the best.-Professor Mark Ledbetter Nisei University<br><br>Striking and raw an antidote to myth. Something to be treasured. This is the kind of record that this generation is losing fast and we need to hold on to this. It made me think of what had happened to my own father's memoirs which were lost.--Professor Barry Fruchter.<br><br>More than any book in recent memory Eaten by the Japanese drives home the lasting effects of enforced captivity - not only on the bodies but also on the minds of the prisoners... it is a book about kindness solidarity and collective survival about the bonds that matter: those between one single human being and another. It is truly a testimony to truth. -Barry Fruchter Ph.D. Professor Nassau Community College New York</p>
Piracy-free
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Secure Transactions
Fast Delivery
Fast Delivery
Sustainably Printed
Sustainably Printed
downArrow

Details