|
Lester James Raymond
 |
 |
photo
courtesy of Lester Raymond
|
photo
by Thais Boise
|
| Lester
Raymond (top row, 2nd from right) is pictured here with
other American POWs at his POW camp. This photo was taken
shortly after his capture. |
Although
Raymond is 78, the government believes he is 81. Raymond
joined the service at age 14. |
War: |
World War II |
Branch: |
Army Air Corps |
Unit: |
5th Air Base |
Service Location: |
Mindanao Island, Philippines |
Highest Rank: |
Corporal |
Birth Year: |
1925 |
Place of Birth: |
Ronan, Montana |
Humor,
compassion help POW
pull through
by Curtis Wackerle
Veterans History Project
Lester James Raymond had the chance to break his chains every
day. His Japanese captors actually trusted him to drive a supply
truck from prison camp to prison camp, bringing food and weapons
to his oppressors. Nothing would have stopped him from not returning
from one of his runs. Nothing except his own conscience.
If Raymond were to have left, he would have condemned nine of
his fellow prisoners to death. During World War II, the Japanese
put their POWs into groups of 10, Raymond said. If one of the
10 attempted an escape, the other nine would be executed by firing
squad. The killing was done in front of all the other prisoners.
Raymond had seen it happen.
Death and violence were a part of daily life at Raymond’s
prison camp outside of Tokyo. In this dreary setting, Raymond
wondered if he would be the next to go.
 |
photo by Thais Boise |
| Lester
Raymond fills out paperwork for the Veterans History Project. |
“I never did think I’d get home again in the prison
camp,” Raymond
admits. But still, he refused to give up hope.
“I knew they wouldn’t get rid of me,” Raymond
said, “So
I survived.”
Raymond is now 80 and lives on Dog Lake, north of Plains, Mont.,
but his spirit and sense of humor are that of a younger man.
He is Native American, enrolled on the Flathead Reservation.
Raymond was just 14 years old and living in western Montana
when he joined the Army Air Corps more than a year before Pearl
Harbor.
His father lied for him, telling the government that Raymond
was 17. Nonchalantly, Raymond said he wanted to join the service
so young because “it was something to do.” Leaving
Montana and the Great Depression behind, Raymond set off to
become an instruments specialist who worked on B-17 bombers.
“I was damn good at my job,” Raymond said. “When
I went to school to study something, I studied. I wanted to
find out a lot of things. At 14, what the heck, you might as well
get everything you can.”
Raymond was stationed on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines
when he was taken prisoner by advancing Japanese forces less
than a month after Pearl Harbor. He remained a POW until the
Japanese surrendered, four years later.
 |
photo by Thais Boise |
| Raymond was taken prisoner by the Japanese at age 15. He
spent his next four birthdays in a POW camp outside Tokyo. |
During those long and difficult years in captivity, Raymond
remained unselfish and dedicated to his buddies. Of the 10 Americans
Raymond
considered his close friends in the camp, only five survived
the ordeal. The psychological pressure to surrender all hope
was constant.
To combat that psychological pressure, Raymond, only a teenager,
was a man for his friends.
“Most of the time, I tried to help the others because there
was a lot of them that wanted to give up,” Raymond said.
Raymond used his sense of humor and tried to keep the mood light
whenever possible.
“When there wasn’t any Japs around, we’d have
a good time,” Raymond said.
After years of surviving on nothing but one daily serving of
rice, Raymond and his buddies used a stray cat to inject a little
fun and mischief into their dreary routines.
The POWs captured the cat as it was wandering across the prison
yard.
“We cooked it right there in the kitchen. The Japs didn’t
know anything about it,” Raymond said with a chuckle. Together,
the POWs boiled the cat and feasted on animal meat for the first
time in years.
“Cat tastes like rabbit,” Raymond said.
After Hiroshima and Nagasaki were leveled by atomic bombs, the
Japanese forced their POWs to do clean-up work around those sites.
Raymond was one of the first Americans to see the destruction
first hand.
“That was a mess up there,” Raymond said. “Everything
was burned. Nothing was standing.”
To this day, Raymond said any watch he wears malfunctions. Digital
scales don’t work either. Raymond suspects that the incredible
amounts of radiation he was exposed to in 1945 are to blame.
When the war finally ended, Raymond had no idea what injustice
would be waiting for him back in the states.
After experiencing more pain and strife than any 19-year-old
should, Raymond left the prison camp weighing only 90 pounds.
He weighed 190 when he entered the camp.
His first taste of injustice came when Raymond’s ship full
of POWs arrived in Washington state. The POWs had to wait until
night time to come on shore.
“Some weighed 87, 90 pounds,” Raymond said. “We
were too skinny. They didn’t want anybody to see us.”
Raymond spent three months recovering in the hospital from four
years of physical
abuse. Raymond’s teeth had been knocked out by the butt of a Japanese rifle
and he had sustained shrapnel wounds during the battle before his capture.
When Raymond applied for disability pay, he expected to get 90 percent like most
of his comrades. Instead, in a painful scene still burnt into his memory, Raymond
was told he would only receive 10 percent benefits.
“The general said ‘Go back to the reservation and let the Indians
take care
of you,’” Raymond said.
So for 50 years, Raymond received a meager $13 per month from the government.
In 1997, he began to receive full benefits.
Raymond’s service also warranted him a Purple Heart, given to all soldiers
wounded in combat, and a Bronze Star, for service above and beyond the call of
duty. But those did not come until a November 2003 ceremony. Apparently, a fire
destroyed paper records and caused the 60-year delay, government officials say.
Although he never joined any veterans organizations, Raymond did keep up with
his war buddies and attended reunions whenever he had the chance.
He recalls one reunion when he toured a B-17 bomber, the plane he was trained
to work on.
“The 17 used to seem so big,” Raymond said. “That son of a
bitch looked
like a small little thing.”
Now most of his war buddies have passed away.
“They just passed away,” Raymond lamented, “so now I don’t
have
anybody to call.”
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