The Rape of Manila remembered


SPEAKING OUT

By IGNACIO R. BUNYE

Ignacio R. Bunye Ignacio R. Bunye

The battle to re-take Manila from Japanese hands raged Feb. 3 to Feb.  29, 1945 – 74 years ago.

On the 8th day, “a squad of Japanese soldiers entered the Red Cross Building and proceeded to shoot and bayonet everyone in the building, including staff doctors, patients and young babies, nurses and refugees. Nurses pleaded for the lives of the mothers with new-born infants, but all were bayonetted or shot. Then the attackers ransacked the building for food and supplies.”

That was the testimony of Modesto Farolan, at that time the acting manager of the Red Cross.

Farolan survived the incident and later testified before the War Crimes Commission which was convened by General Douglas McArthur as soon as Japan surrendered.

This and other similar massacres,  committed within a two-week period in  February, 1945,   resulted in the death of 100,000 civilians -- roughly 1 out of every 4 residents of Manila at that time.

According to historians, The Rape of Manila was surpassed only by the Rape of Nanking which resulted in the death of  around 300,000 Chinese civilians during the Sino-Japanese War.

Among the victims  of the Manila massacres were the family of the late President Elpidio Quirino, who lost his wife and three children.

On December 7, 1945, the fourth anniversary of the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the War Crimes Commission handed down its verdict after three months of almost daily hearings.

General Yamashita and some of his top aides were found guilty and later executed.

Admiral SanjiIwabuchi who was directly responsible for the Rape of Manila did not undergo trial. He committed ritual suicide together with his staff when Intramuros fell.

General Homma -- held responsible for the atrocities during the Bataan Death March -- was extradited from Japan, was sentenced, and likewise executed.

More than a hundred junior officers were imprisoned in the New Bilibid Prison; 18 were hanged.

But in an amazing turn of events,  the rest were subsequently pardoned by President Elpidio Quirino.

Filipinos, who were crying for more blood,  were outraged by Quirino’s pardon of the Japanese.

But Quirino explained:

“I should be the last one to pardon them as the Japanese killed my wife and three children, and

five other members of my family. I am doing this because I do not want my children and my

people to inherit from me the hate for people who might yet be our friends, for the permanent

interest of our country.”

Seventy-four years after the Rape of Manila, the memories of Japanese atrocities have all but faded in the Filipino consciousness.

Survivors have grown fewer as the years passed.

The post-Liberation generations have only a vague inkling of the extent of the Japanese atrocities during  the war.

In my case, I was born in Tuberias, Quiapo (the “relatively safer side” of Manila) more than a month after the fighting ceased.

As a post-Liberation baby, my very first encounter with a Japanese occurred when I was

already 3 years old.

He was a kind Japanese Shinto  priest who came to  our home after  visiting Japanese war criminals confined in Bilibid. At that time, my father, Dr. Alfredo M. Bunye, was the jailer of the Japanese.

In Bilibid, much to surprise of the Japanese prisoners, they were treated humanely by my father whose own father Ignacio (my namesake) was executed by the Japanese on February 3, 1945.

The slowly diminishing number of survivors may have forgiven. But they have not forgotten.

In 2015, Lourdes R. Montinola, a survivor, relived her own experience in a lecture held she gave the Ortigas Library. She had earlier written a book entitled “Breaking The Silence”.

In 1995, on the 50th anniversary of the Rape of Manila, survivors led by former Ambassadors Juan Jose Roche and Miguel Perez-Rubio erected a simple memorial – Memorare Manila 1945 - which has since stood in the heart of Intramuros.

The memorial depicts a mother, cradling her dead child, surrounded by six other anguished survivors  of the atrocities.

Note: The foregoing is excerpted from my E-Book: “From Leyte to Bessang Pass.” If you are interested to have a copy, you may email me at [email protected] so I can provide you the link.