Surviving the Bataan Death March

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024

Комментарии • 9

  • @petorney
    @petorney 9 лет назад +204

    God Bless You, Lester Tenney, for sharing your story,

  • @rodrigo8959
    @rodrigo8959 8 лет назад +199

    What a hero! This people were whitout doubt the GREATEST GENERATION!

  • @shirleysessions8525
    @shirleysessions8525 9 лет назад +210

    My cousin, Wilbur Pickett of Wesson, Ms. survived the march and more than five years in the death camp. Although he returned home to marry and have children, he never recovered and committed suicide .

  • @jerrycrumly2107
    @jerrycrumly2107 9 лет назад +122

    My wife's Uncle John Henry Spigler Capt. US. Army Was at Corregidor. He was listed as missing. In all of our research we have not been able find if he was killed at Corregidor or on the death march. We hope that there might be a chance that Mr. Tenney might have known Uncle John however slight it might be. His wife name was Virginia and they were from Salam OR.

  • @zerofox1551
    @zerofox1551 8 лет назад +553

    Tell me again how dropping the bomb was a war crime.

  • @ikeike2
    @ikeike2 8 лет назад +39

    WOW!!!!

  • @michaelkaminski1615
    @michaelkaminski1615 8 лет назад +29

    wow! lit

  • @Ohyeahjiful
    @Ohyeahjiful 8 лет назад +55

    You will be happy that you at least got back from Bataan Lester! We know what US (white) soldiers did to Filipinos. US used Filipino soldiers as protection of whites, Filipino was always the front line to battle against Japan. Bataan March was only 120KM! Big deal! Japan never expected that 70000 US soldiers were going to give up and become POW. Should have fought to the end, Mr. Lester Tenney!!