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Wednesday 04 September 2024 14:45:11 GMT
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each video Philippines' hair gets longer  The Bataan Death March was one of the darkest episodes of World War II, occurring after the surrender of Filipino and American forces to Japanese forces on April 9, 1942. At the time, American and Filipino troops had been under siege on the Bataan Peninsula in the Philippines for nearly four months, fighting with dwindling supplies, weakened by disease, hunger, and exhaustion. When their ammunition and food were finally depleted, approximately 75,000 troops, mostly Filipino with around 10,000 Americans, surrendered. This was the largest surrender in American and Filipino history, as well as one of the largest in the Pacific Theater. After their surrender, the prisoners of war (POWs) were forced to march approximately 65 miles from the southern tip of the Bataan Peninsula to a prison camp in San Fernando and, later, Camp O’Donnell. The journey was a grueling and deadly ordeal under the scorching tropical heat, with prisoners receiving almost no food, water, or medical attention. The Japanese guards, who were deeply influenced by a harsh military culture that looked down on surrender as shameful, treated the POWs with disdain and cruelty. Many of the guards viewed the prisoners as dishonorable, which led to extreme mistreatment and a disregard for their lives. The conditions on the march were inhumane. Soldiers who were too weak to keep up, often due to dehydration, starvation, or untreated wounds, were beaten, stabbed, bayoneted, or shot by the guards. Those who tried to drink water from muddy streams or roadside puddles were sometimes executed on the spot. Prisoners were also subjected to what became known as the
each video Philippines' hair gets longer The Bataan Death March was one of the darkest episodes of World War II, occurring after the surrender of Filipino and American forces to Japanese forces on April 9, 1942. At the time, American and Filipino troops had been under siege on the Bataan Peninsula in the Philippines for nearly four months, fighting with dwindling supplies, weakened by disease, hunger, and exhaustion. When their ammunition and food were finally depleted, approximately 75,000 troops, mostly Filipino with around 10,000 Americans, surrendered. This was the largest surrender in American and Filipino history, as well as one of the largest in the Pacific Theater. After their surrender, the prisoners of war (POWs) were forced to march approximately 65 miles from the southern tip of the Bataan Peninsula to a prison camp in San Fernando and, later, Camp O’Donnell. The journey was a grueling and deadly ordeal under the scorching tropical heat, with prisoners receiving almost no food, water, or medical attention. The Japanese guards, who were deeply influenced by a harsh military culture that looked down on surrender as shameful, treated the POWs with disdain and cruelty. Many of the guards viewed the prisoners as dishonorable, which led to extreme mistreatment and a disregard for their lives. The conditions on the march were inhumane. Soldiers who were too weak to keep up, often due to dehydration, starvation, or untreated wounds, were beaten, stabbed, bayoneted, or shot by the guards. Those who tried to drink water from muddy streams or roadside puddles were sometimes executed on the spot. Prisoners were also subjected to what became known as the "sun treatment," in which they were forced to sit in the blistering heat without cover for hours, often with little or no water. The guards would sometimes use POWs for target practice or bayonet training, committing acts of casual violence that underscored the brutality of the journey. Out of the approximately 75,000 who started the march, around 10,000 Filipino soldiers and 650 American soldiers are estimated to have died from exhaustion, disease, dehydration, starvation, or outright execution. By the time they reached the prison camps, many survivors were on the brink of death. The treatment did not improve in the camps, where prisoners continued to suffer from overcrowding, lack of sanitation, disease, and malnutrition. The death rate in the camps remained high, and the prisoners faced another struggle to survive. The Bataan Death March became a symbol of Japanese wartime atrocities and a rallying cry for Allied forces in the Pacific. After the war, Japanese officers responsible for the death march and subsequent POW mistreatment were tried and convicted of war crimes. The legacy of the Bataan Death March has lived on as a testament to the endurance of those who suffered through it and a reminder of the cruel realities of war. #fyp #foryou #viral #countryhumans #countryballs #philippines #ap #sunstar

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