Thursday, August 23, 2012

Bataan Legacy - Press Release


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact:  Matthew Lew, (415) 399-9580
 mhf@manilatown.org;  www.manilatown.org      

In Commemoration of National POW/MIA Recognition Day

Manilatown Heritage Foundation & Artis Mundi
Present
The Legacy of Bataan
Friday, September 21 at 6:00PM
I-Hotel Manilatown Center
868 Kearny St., San Francisco, CA 94108

San Francisco, CA – July 24, 2012 –  In commemoration of  National POW (Prisoners of War)/MIA (Missing in Action) Recognition Day,  Manilatown Heritage Foundation and Artis Mundi are proud to present The Legacy of Bataan on Friday, September 21 at 6:00PM at the I-Hotel Manilatown Center at 868 Kearny St. in San Francisco.   Donations will be appreciated.

This multi-media program will feature film clips with live narration by Cecilia Gaerlan, author of the World War II novel, In Her Mother’s Image, presentations by World War II ex-Civilian Prisoner of War John Ream and historians Fred & Sebastian Baldassarre of the Battling Bastards of Bataan.  It will feature the first performance of Breach of Faith – The Men of Bataan, a one-man show based on stories of Bataan veterans written by Ms. Gaerlan and performed by New York artist Kilusan Bautista.   Also featured is a scene from the stage adaptation of In Her Mother’s Image with Jed Parsario and Earlene Somera.  The highlight of the program will be the appearance of several Bataan veterans who will speak about their experiences during the war and their subsequent incarceration.

The price of peace was paid dearly by the defenders of Bataan. And yet, their place in history has been ignored, derided and even maligned.  Despite the lack of training, meager resources and a broken promise from the United States that help was on the way, the men of Bataan fought a fierce and bitter battle that disrupted the timetable of the Japanese occupation enabling the Allied Forces to harness the resources that turned the tide of war in the Pacific.  After the fall of Bataan on April 9, 1942, around 63,000 Filipino and 12,000 American soldiers surrendered to the Japanese Imperial Army.  Approximately 15,000 Filipino and 750 American soldiers, mostly sick and emaciated, died during the 60-mile march to their prison camp at Camp O’Donnell where the prisoners were subjected to even more inhumane treatment.  Approximately fifteen hundred Americans and twenty thousand Filipinos died in captivity.   And yet, not even a year after the war ended, the veterans’ benefits of the Filipinos under the U.S. Armed Forces of the Far East were rescinded by President Truman in 1946.  To this day, these rights have not been fully restored nor their sacrifices honored. 

No comments:

Post a Comment