Wednesday, December 19, 2007

KIYOTSKEI, KEREI, NAOREI

There are two names which, to Dutch survivors of the Japanese occupation of the Indies, are bywords for cruelty and perversion: Ambarawa and Tjideng. The first is a minor town in Central Java, I believe, and the second was a neighborhood in Batavia. Both were where the Japanese interned women and children.

The men were sent to work on the railway at Pakan Bahru in Sumatra, or shipped to Burma and Japan.

Initially, teenage boys were also interned in the "Women's Camps", but as the war went on, more and more of them were pulled out and used as slave-labour by the Japanese, until by the end of the war there weren't even any boys older than nine or ten in the camps.

At Ambarawa, the Japs at one point forced a number of prisoners to become comfort women - the youngest was only fourteen years old.

At Tjideng, in Batavia, the camp area kept getting shrunk, and the number of internees, despite a high mortality rate, kept growing, as the Japanese packed more and more people into the kamp. When the Japanese finally surrendered there were up to twenty women per room - by the end of the war Tjideng contained over ten thousand prisoners.

Both in Ambarawa and Tjideng there were the usual diseases that accompany crowded unsanitary conditions and starvation, plus physical abuse and sadism from the guards. A huge number of internees did not survive the war.
Nothing unusual there.


But Tjideng had one additional horror. A camp commandant who was a wherewolf.


Captain Kenichi Sonei, who considered himself a civilized and cultured man, was a maniac during full moons, and outdid himself in cruelty and perversion on those nights. Under normal circumstances an exceptionally brutal and sadistic man who delighted in the humiliation and torture of his victims, at full moon he went entirely overboard. Everybody describes him as being an absolute madman at that time.

After the war Captain Sonei was tried for war-crimes and executed by firing squad. The number of people who could testify to his bestial nature was so overwhelming that nothing could save him. Even his own men admitted being frightened of him, describing him as a psychopath and a monster.


Many of the Dutch who were interned by the Japanese still particularly loathe everything having to do with Japan. And quite a few of the women, because of Captain Sonei, have mixed feelings about moonlight.

It is probably a good thing that the Netherlands is so often cloudy and overcast.

=======================================

I cannot remember any full moons while growing up..... although I'm sure they are not unknown there. It must simply be a gap in my memory.
I was trying to remember last night what full moon nights were like in Valkenswaard, but I cannot picture it in my mind. The different types of streetlights, no problem - clear images, detailed even to the nature of shadows and their boundaries from those lights. But no moon.

9 comments:

Spiros said...

I seem to remember you postulating a week's lag time in reaction to the full moon amongst the North Beach demi-monde...

Jack Steiner said...

That was interesting.

Houston said...

In 1942, at the so-called Bicycle Camp in Batavia, my great uncle Frank saw Capt. Sonei rip all the hair off a prisoner's head, one chunk at a time. He also mentions Sonei flogging one of his own men. These and other experiences are recorded in his POW memoir, "The Sky Looked Down":

http://theskylookeddown.blogspot.com

Oom Frank's wife Elisabeth (Tante Lies) was imprisoned with their little daughter in Ambawara and Banjubiru camps. Her story can be read here:

http://theskylookeddownappendix.blogspot.com

As you can probably guess, I'm from a Dutch Indo family, and we will never forget what the older generation endured during the Japanese occupation.

Houston said...

In reference to the title of this post, my great aunt Tante Janny once recited Tenko (Japanese roll call) for me. It began with the command "Kiyotskei!" (Attention!), followed by "Kerei!" (Bow!). Then she counted up to ten in Japanese. It was a ritual she had to perform many times in occupied Surabaya.

The back of the hill said...

Robin,
Auntie Ietje knew it from her experiences during the war. She said that 'naorei' (at ease) seemed the hardest thing for a Japanese officer to voice.

One of my father's colleagues claimed that he first learned Japanese while the emperor's unwilling guest. He spoke over a dozen languages in addition to Japanese. I cannot remember his name, though - I only met him a few times when at my father's office.

Uncle Jan, who was born on Java and also spoke several languages, refused to ever deal with the Japanese ever again. When Hirohito visited Europe (1972?), Jan took a long vacation, revisiting Java for several weeks. He didn't want to have to listen to the hot-air from politicians and commentators about the emperor's trip.

The back of the hill said...

And further to my mention of auntie Ietje, you may be interested in this post:

http://atthebackofthehill.blogspot.com/2007/03/forty-year-old-fragrance.html
Clickable link:
Fragrance

As well as this one (which has a recipe!):
http://atthebackofthehill.blogspot.com/2006/09/boterkoek-butter-cake.html
Clickable link:
Cake


Also note the clickable labels underneath posts - Indo is selfexplanatory, tempo doeloe in the context of this blog is rather personal - not the 'olden days' that Indos know, but my own life before returning to the United States. Tamarao is a language and a culture.

Anonymous said...

Capt. Sonei was not shot, but hanged in Singapore as a war criminal. We were there, my mother, brother and sister and I were there at the time in a refugee camp, having repatriated there from camp Tjideng, Batavia then now Djakarta. War criminals don't get shot, but hanged, that shows that they were dishonorable!End 1945 or beginning 1946. This is to set the records straight.

The back of the hill said...

Per Wikipedia: "From April 1944 the camp was under the command of Captain Kenichi Sonei, who was responsible for many atrocities. After the war Sonei was arrested, and sentenced to death on September 2, 1946. The sentence was carried out by a Dutch firing squad in December of that year, after a request for pardon to the Dutch lieutenant governor-general, Hubertus van Mook, was rejected. Van Mook's wife had been one of Sonei's prisoners."

The back of the hill said...

From Tjideng Reunion, by Boudewyn van Oort: "convicted in Batavia oin 2 September 1946 as a class B war criminal and executed in Batavia (Jakarta) in 7 December 1946."

Note that this does not mention method of execution.

But you are right; hanging is more likely than what Wikipedia states.


I cannot find independent corroboration of his method of death.

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