Despite three and a half years as a teenage prisoner Theo
Nijland still prefers his birthplace to his homeland. On his 23rd trip to Indonesia the Dutchman told his
story of survival to Duncan Graham
in Malang.
“I was born in Batavia in 1928. My father was a senior public servant from Holland. My mother was born in Indonesia of German
and Chinese ancestry.
“After my father was
posted to Padang, I went to a Catholic school.
We had a lovely house, a car and a good life.
“When the Japanese invaded Malaya we weren’t that
worried. We thought we couldn’t
lose. We were too strong, that they
couldn’t get past Singapore. We relied
on the British – what can I say?
“The first Japanese soldiers I saw arrived while we were
having breakfast. They ordered us out, or be killed. There was no time to flee.
They took our watches and money. They were very small men with very long guns,
longer than them. It was 7 April
1942. I will never forget.
“Because I was small I went into a prison camp with my
mother, younger brother and sister. She
was seven. The camp had been a school.
About 3,000 lived there, 30 or 40 to a room.
“We didn’t know what had happened to my father. He was in
the KNIL (Dutch army). They tried to
fight but the Japanese were like ants, everywhere, too strong.
“After six months the Japanese realised I was 14 and I was
moved far inland to the same camp as my older brother. We lived mainly on
tapioca. There was no protein. If anyone caught getting food from outside
we were all lined up and hit on the head with rifles. I learned to duck to reduce the blow.
“I was slapped a lot. Only a few guards had feelings. We
slept on wooden beds we made ourselves.
The fleas were terrible. I had a
tooth pulled with a spoonful of salt as painkiller. My brother has his appendix
removed without anaesthetic.
“We smoked anything, mainly dead leaves using pages from
Bibles to make cigarettes. We boiled banana skins. They were tasteless but filling.
We ate rats and sometimes snakes – not so fantastic.
“The food was sent
to Japan. I worked on a chicken farm. The Japanese were terrified of
disease. So we rammed bamboo splinters
into the skin under the birds’ wings.
This made them collapse and the Japanese thought they were sick. That was our revenge.
“About a third of the prisoners died. On one day I remember
there were 11 bodies.
“I wanted school, but people would only teach for food. I
used to think: ‘Is this real?’ I didn’t cry – everyone was in the same
position. We got some outside news. I
never gave up hope it would end.
“After the atom bombs were dropped the guards opened the
gates. We didn’t leave. We were afraid of the Indonesians. But there was no trouble. They were less
fanatical in Sumatra, maybe because women are bosses in Minangkabau culture.
“We had no clothes, just a strip of cloth folded between our
thighs so we took Japanese uniforms. I weighed less than 40 kilos
“They transported us to Penang and I eventually found my
family by asking around. It was very emotional. We had all survived though my
mother had been sick.
“We were very lucky, sure, sure. Why? Don’t ask me, I
don’t know. Maybe my karma.
Religious? No.
“We were repatriated to Holland. My father never spoke about his experiences. He’d been forced to work on the Pakanbaru
railway. He was so ashamed. My mother
told a little. She had a gold watch
from her grandfather that she kept hidden from the Japanese. That was clever.
“We’d lost all our other possessions. We’ve sought
compensation from the Japanese and Dutch.
Nothing.
“In Holland I was two centimeters too short for military
service. I became a marine
engineer. I married Mary Severens in
1953 and we had two sons.
“In 1979, after 34 years in Holland I came back to show my
wife the prison in Penang. They let us in.
That was a big mistake. I was so stupid. After that I had nightmares
that I was could never get out.
“In Holland I spent three years learning Indonesian and now
we return every year, to Medan, Jakarta, Bogor, Bali and now Malang. We try to spend two or three months
here.
“In Holland there’s no respect. You get ignored in shops or told: ‘Hey, old man, what you want?’
They won’t even bring you coffee. It’s almost impossible to have a friendly
conversation – here it’s every day. My
grandchildren don’t want to know my story. They say: ‘We’re living now, not in
the past’.
“Here people are kind. They care and go out of their way to
be helpful. Indonesians don’t seem to
bear any animosity to the Dutch. We enjoy the food and lifestyle.
“I hate the Japanese.
I try not to hire Japanese cars, but in Indonesia that’s difficult. I was once approached by a Japanese on a
beach outside Surabaya to chat but I told him to f**k off. My wife says I shouldn’t hate but that’s my
feeling.
“We seldom mix with the Dutch here. Many are married to younger local women and
my wife doesn’t like that.
“I tell Indonesians that I was born here and feel happier
here than in Holland. I say I have a
stronger feeling for Indonesia than anywhere else. Look, my skin is brown. But they say: ‘No, you are still Dutch.’
“Mary is my age, 85 this year. The only effect from my
prison life is that I can’t drink milk. The nightmares have now gone. I forget where I’ve put my watch or today’s
appointments, but I remember the hunger. And the fleas.
“What did I learn from those experiences? That we must care
for each other.”
(First published in The Jakarta Post 4 March 2013)
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Hi Duncan, That is a story worth recording with many insights and touching reflections. "My father never spoke about his experiences." I have known various East Indies-born people and they all invariably loved the country just as much as white Australians care about this country. In fact, they all cared more about Indonesian people and their lives than we have for our indigenous people (not a difficult feat). See a page on the late much loved Frank Coenders. BUT colonialism was and is extractive, exploitive, for-profit; it is military conquest and deprivation of sovereignty and life, whether carried out by Dutch, Japanese, Javanese or modern Australian mining companies. See brilliant article by Simon Kuper on "The End of Colonial Nostalgia" and the superb unclaimed Indies photo albums in the Tropenmuseum. Thanks for your ever interesting blog, Duncan. Phil Mahnken
ReplyDelete"The End of Colonial Nostalgia" by Simon Kuper. The unclaimed Indies photo albums in the Tropenmuseum.
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