The
Electric
New Paper's
 
My mother
often talks
about these
times. She
was very poor.
Almost
everyone was.


|

| 1930s: We
were then a peaceful, British colony.
Singapore was part of the Straits
Settlements, which included Penang and
Malacca. British rule
in Singapore was generally laissez-faire (or,
as put in Singlish, anything also can). The
different ethnic communities were left alone
to manage their own affairs.
The colonial government
spent public money only for a few English-
and Malay-medium schools. It didn't care
about Chinese education. The Chinese were, of
course, not happy.
|

Pre-war
Singapore: Little slow but no COEs needed |
|
Victims of the
slump
(ST, Dec 1, 1930)
Jobless in SingaporeTanglin
Bathing Beauties
(ST, Dec 1, 1930)
1930s
lifestyle
|
So the Chinese community began
building schools on its own or with help from China.
In the late 1920s and early 1930s,
communists tried to get a toe into Chinese schools
and trade unions, but on the whole, they were not
very successful as police arrested key commie bosses.
Singapore was hard hit by the Great
Depression of 1929 to 1933 as international trade,
including trade in Malayan tin and rubber, crashed.
Times were tough -- many had no jobs and money was
hard to come by.
|
Hostilities
break
out in North China
(ST, Jul 8, 1937)
Sino-Jap warNazi-Soviet
tension reported growing
(ST, June 21, 1941)
War fund
advances by
nearly $1,000
today
(ST, Jan 1, 1942)
|

July 1937: War broke out in Asia when Japan
attacked China. Meanwhile, in Europe, war broke out
in Sept 1939 when fascist Germany invaded Poland.
In 1940, the Germany-Italy-Japan Axis was formed
and in June 1941, Hitler invaded the Soviet Union.
Blood was flowing elsewhere but, Singapore
remained very much out of the war scene. Although the
local newspapers such as The Straits Times often
carried front-page reports of the war in Europe and
Asia, and even set up a war fund, war generally
seemed very far away.
Even though the feelings of the Singapore Chinese
were aroused in the Sino-Japanese war, most of the
support for China was indirect and from afar, such
as, by boycotting Japanese goods.

Source:
Malaya Tribune
Here is how the Japanese were seen:
"short-sighted, buck-toothed, little men"
who did not appreciate the military strength of the
Allied powers.
The cartoon accompanied an article which stated
that "the Japanese are caught in a trap of their
own making...neither by land nor sea nor in the air
do they have even a glimmer of a chance of
victory..."
The article appeared in a leading Singapore
newspaper, The Malaya Tribune, on Dec 3, 1941.
It reflected a general belief that there was no
threat of war in Southeast Asia, because of the thick
jungles of the Malay Peninsula and the military might
of the British. Singapore, especially, was regarded
as an "impregnable fortress.
Yes, people actually believed Singapore would
never, could never fall.
|

Singapore was
so small and
fragile. How
could people
think it was
an 'impregnable
fortress'?


|
| |

But just five days later, Japan dropped its first
bombs on Singapore. The bombs, which were dropped at
4 am on Dec 8, 1941, killed 60 people and injured
more than 700.
| Another turning
point was when the British battleship, Prince
of Wales, and battle cruiser, Repulse, were
sunk by Japanese torpedo bombers on Dec 10,
1941. It was a big blow to British morale. |

The
Prince of Wales |
|
Japs now
20
miles
from
Singapore
(ST, Jan 31, 1942)
The Japs are coming |

Japanese
troops conquered Malaya on bicycles |
About one and
a half months later, on January 31, 1942,
the Japanese entered Johor Baru. Bicycles
were an important factor behind the quick
advance of the Japanese forces through
Malaya. The three divisions of the Japanese
Army engaged in the campaign were equipped
with about 18,000 bicycles. Singapore was
next on the agenda of the "bicycle
brigade".
|
Death
from the sky
Still, the local people were confident that the
Japanese had no hope of taking Singapore.
The source of their faith: The optimistic wartime
propaganda in the local newspapers.
The Japanese launched intense air attacks on
Singapore in late January and early February 1942,
killing 150 - 200 people each day. But the main local
newspaper, The Straits Times still carried this
message from Governor Sir Shenton Thomas, underneath
its masthead every day:
"Singapore Must Stand; It SHALL
Stand" - H.E. the Governor.
After the news of the sinking of Prince of Wales
and Repulse, they still did not believe Singapore was
in danger. When Johor was overrun, they thought it
was a tactical retreat by the British. They believed
British forces would regroup and counterattack.
|
Citys
new
defence
line
(ST, Feb 14, 1942)
News just before the
fall of SingaporeStrong
Jap
pressure
(Sun Times,
Feb 15, 1942)
Report that appeared
on the day Singapore
fell to the Japs


So this is the
Tiger of Malaya

|

Sunday, Feb 15, 1942, the first day of the Lunar
New Year: Singapore fell to the Japanese.

The
Tiger of Malaya |
Here is
the man behind the Japanese campaign -
Lieutenant-General Tomoyuki Yamashita, dubbed
the Tiger of Malaya. After invading Johor,
General Yamashita realised that he had to
invade Singapore quickly before the British
recovered their strength. He did not have
enough supplies to last out a long-drawn
siege of Singapore, but the British did not
know that.
|
Working in the dead of night, the Japanese set up
a beach-head in the Lim Chu Kang area on Feb 8. By
Feb 9, Tengah airfield was in their hands. The morale
of the British forces reached rock-bottom. Many
British and local lives were lost trying to defend
strategic positions.
The water mains were destroyed during the air
raids, and Singapore was almost totally without
water. As the air was filled with stench of filth and
death, Lieutenant- General Arthur Percival, who was
in command of all Allied forces in Singapore felt
that the situation was hopeless.
To avoid more destruction and loss of lives, he
asked the permission of the Far East Supreme
Commander to surrender.
The permission was granted on Feb 14.
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Holdings. All Rights Reserved.
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