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Streaming video

Title End of empire / by Four Square Productions and Crest Communications Production
Published New York, NY : Filmakers Library, 2002

Copies

Description 1 online resource (45 min.)
Series Filmakers library online
Summary This film tells the harrowing story of the Japanese occupation of Singapore from 1941-45. Archival film as well as fascinating interviews with two historians, Professors A. Jayathurai and Brian Farrell relate the tragedy of this important theater of war. But it is the story of Alexander Cockburn a young Scotsman who had recently signed on for a four-year stint as a pharmacist in the bustling colonial city that gives the dramatic history a personal dimension. Instead of enjoying a brilliant career in Singapore, Cockburn witnessed its swift and violent end, as well as the symbolic end of the British Empire. In the 1930s it was widely believed that Singapore was an impregnable fortress. When the well-trained and equipped Japanese invaded Northern Malaya in 1941, shortly after Pearl Harbor, they easily defeated the under-prepared Indian, New Zealand and Australian troops who had joined the British there. When British officials realized Singapore would fall, they evacuated the colonials, leaving the Chinese, Indian and Malay populations to fend for themselves. Throughout this, Cockburn worked as a medical volunteer, cleaning up the bodies left from Japanese bombing. Two British battleships were sunk with nine hundred British sailors lost and the British surrendered after six weeks. Under the Japanese occupation, one hundred thousand prisoners of war were arrested and imprisoned or executed in six weeks. Cockburn was taken prisoner by the Japanese and spent four years in horrendous conditions, with almost no food or medicine available. He used his experience as a pharmacist to help his fellow inmates as much as he could. It is estimated that twenty to thirty thousand people perished in captivity. As Prof. Jayathurai says, "Churchill gave up Malaya for the defense of Europe. This was the end of the British Empire; everything after that was borrowed time."
Analysis History
Audience For College; Adult audiences
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Cockburn, Alexander
SUBJECT Cockburn, Alexander fast
Subject World War, 1939-1945.
SUBJECT Singapore -- History -- Japanese occupation, 1942-1945. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh89004089
Subject Singapore
Genre/Form Documentary
History
Documentary.
Form Streaming video
Author Crest Communications Production
Four Square Productions.