pow 1944d

I am hoping to connect with the living descendants/relatives of wartime captives resided in Hong Kong and Macau during that period.  Based on the s/s Sai On incident on August 19, 1943, I am specifically looking for C. H. (father) & Thomas (son) Jackson's and George Ahmed's surviving families.  Regards, Doug Harteam

Date picture taken
29 Aug 1945

Comments

Hi Doug,

I haven't heard of this escape before, please can you tell us more about it?

Also, do you know the names for the initials A.K., A.R., and C.H. in the photo above?

Regards, David

Alfred Kenneth was my father and Alexander Robert, my uncle.  No information about the Jacksons' and Ahmed.

A little more than a quarter of a century ago, the “paper crumble” file I sent was “restored and digitized” and kept in a CD.  The original was then passed to the Hong Kong Government Museum of History for (they said restoration) and permanent storage. 

There were two separate stories told by my father:

The Rifle

One day, a Japanese guard stripped down his rifle for cleaning under the watchful eyes of a few captives.  When he couldn't put it back together, panic set in, and he desperately turned to the prisoners for help.  The brothers and a few men stepped forward and effortlessly reassembled the weapon on their very first attempt.  Overjoyed and relieved, the guard later rewarded the prisoners with an abundance of food, drinks, and cigarettes.

 

The Escape

Once on the water, the brothers noticed that their three companions could barely swim, quickly lagging behind and failing to maintain "total silence."  They had reached the point of no return.  In an instinctive move, Alfred grabbed the two lighter men while Bob took hold of the older Jackson.  They dragged them through the water all the way to the shore. Though the men had lied about their swimming ability, all were profoundly grateful to reach safety after such a narrow escape.

Thanks for the extra background information.

I can't find any information about the incident online, although I can see it is covered in a printed book, Wartime Macau, Under the Japanese Shadow

Do you know why the five men were on board the ship? e.g. were they working as crew of the ship, or just on board as passengers? And was Macau their usual home, or were they from Hong Kong and had moved to Macau during the Japanese occupation?

It is revealed by current web search assisted by AI, some research has been carried out at Cardiff University c.2023. More details about the Sai-On incident may be read from the article (link).  

Some other details are also covered on macaumemory.mo website, but written in Chinese.
Steamer Sai On is 西安號 in Chinese. A photo of it c.1929-30 at Taikoo Dockyard may be viewed here (on p.55).

 

Is this the same Sai On that was involved in the Feb 1947 fire and was later renovated and renamed the Tak Shing?