
This Sunday, August 15th, marks the 65th anniversary of Victory in Japan (VJ) Day.
More than 10,000 Canadians served in Hong Kong, Burma and other Far East theatres, which proved to be the longest campaign of the Second World War. Many Canadians were taken as prisoners of war in the Far East and spent several horrific years living in deplorable conditions.
Lieutenant Kay Christie was one of only two Canadian Nursing Sisters in Hong Kong.
Shortly after Christmas in 1941, the British Military Hospital where she was on duty was declared a Prisoner of War camp by the Japanese. Barbed wire fences and electric wires went up around the hospital as a means of ensuring that no one escaped.
After eight months of being witness to horrors beyond imagination and learning to cope with hunger, deprivation and overcrowding, Kay, along with 2,400 men, women and children, was moved to a civilian internment camp on Stanley Peninsula on the South side of the island. Privacy and basic comforts were conspicuous by their absence and “scrounging” to make do became a way of life.
Rations were very small and often not fit to eat. There was no refrigeration, so whatever was received had to be made into a stew so that there was enough to go around. Any leftover was turned into a thin soup for the next day. There was a baker in Kay’s block who was able to take the small rations of flour and turn them into bread. The “unknowns” in the flour were accepted as extra protein.
Life continued like this until the middle of 1943 when they learned that the Canadian Government had negotiated to have all Canadian civilian internees repatriated along with the group of American civilians remaining in other parts of the Far East.
They left Stanley Camp on September 23, 1943 and began their journey home. The first four weeks were on a dreadful Japanese ship where the conditions were even worse than at the internment camp. The ship was built to hold 400 passengers; however, there were 1,530 people on board.
After arriving in Goa, the civilians were exchanged for 1,530 Japanese internees from the U.S. Several days later, they boarded the American ship which was like a touch of heaven for them. It was clean and loaded with food.
During the next six weeks of her trip home, Kay gained back 20 of the pounds she had lost in captivity and started to enjoy life again.
Exactly ten weeks after leaving Hong Kong, Kay and the other civilian internees disembarked in New York and the Canadians were taken to a train for an overnight trip to Montreal. She was finally back in Canada where she belonged and had a brand new appreciation for a way of life that many had previously taken for granted.
After her repatriation to Canada, Kay worked hard and long for the betterment of those brave Canadian Hong Kong veterans.
Her dedication to this group is legendary, but, as she often said, no one knew better than her, the terrible ordeal they had gone through; hence, it was little enough to devote her life to trying to make things a little easier for these very fine men.
Kay did not, however, confine her efforts to her beloved Hong Kong veterans. She was a prominent member of the Nursing Sisters’ Association and represented her fellow Nursing Sisters on the National Council of Veteran Associations.
She served a term as the Chair of the National Council, during which she took part in several commemorative trips overseas.
Her presence on these trips always resulted in a strong relationship with the Minister and his departmental staff as well as the other veterans taking part who represented other organizations.
Kay was struck down with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s disease) in 1992 and passed away peacefully in Toronto on February 7, 1994.
Kay Christie is one of 1,975 names that appear on the Hong Kong Veterans Memorial Wall, which stands as a fitting tribute to the Canadian men and women sent to assist the British in defending Hong Kong against the Japanese invasion in the Second World War. The wall stands at the corner of Sussex Drive and King Edward Street in Ottawa and was unveiled one year ago on the anniversary of VJ Day.