September 25, 2012

Life Laid Down

As a prisoner of the Imperial Japanese Army in the jungles of Thailand during WWII, Ernest Gordon, a commander in a Scottish infantry battalion, saw firsthand the depths of depravity that can happen when man sinks to his lowest.

At age 24, Gordon was captured while escaping from Sumatra after the fall of Singapore. With other prisoners he was marched into the jungle to build the notorious bridge on the River Kwai.

Starvation, beatings, disease, and dawn-to-dusk slave labor were hallmarks of the death camp. The Scottish and British soldiers, normally bastions of composure, good cheer, and self-discipline, were slowly influenced by death’s destructive grip. Morale broke down, along with concern for one’s fellow man.

Over time, “nothing mattered except to survive,” wrote Gordon. “We lived by the law of the jungle, survival of the fittest. It was a case of ‘I look out for myself and to hell with everyone else.’ The weak were trampled underfoot, the sick ignored or resented, the dead forgotten. All restraints of morality [were] gone.”

Then, slowly, something remarkable began to emerge in the camp.
 
·        Selflessness. A few officers began to pool their meager resources. They sent food to the sick prisoners holed up in the makeshift dispensary.

·        Compassion. Gordon himself became gravely ill, and two fellow soldiers, Dusty and Dinty, volunteered to come by every day and wash his wounds.

“Several men,” Gordon wrote, “in the midst of widespread degradation and despair, kept their integrity inviolate and their faith whole.”

The supreme example of a different way of living came to a climax one horrific evening after a long day of hard labor.

That night, when the tools were counted, a Japanese guard announced that one shovel was missing. One of the prisoners had stolen the shovel to sell on the black market, it was assumed. The crime was heinous, the guard railed. The perpetrator had maligned the Emperor himself, an act punishable by death.

The guard lined up the men in the work party and demanded that whoever took the shovel confess. No one did. The guard ranted and screamed, denouncing the men for their wickedness. His rage reached a new level.

“All die! All die!” the guard shrieked. He pointed his rifle at the crowd and set his finger on the trigger. The prisoners knew he was serious.

Calmly, quietly, from the back of the work party, one solitary man stepped forward.

“I did it,” the man said.

The guard unleashed his fury on the man. In front of the rest of the prisoners, a contingent of armed guards standing by, he beat the man bloody with the butt of his rifle, crushing the man’s skull.

When the tools were counted again, it was found that all the shovels were there.

The guard had miscounted.

One man died in the dust and dirt of the death camp by the River Kwai.

One man died so that others might live.

“It was dawning on us all,” Gordon wrote, “that the law of the jungle is not the law for man. We were seeing for ourselves the sharp contrast between the forces that made for life, and those that made for death.

“Selfishness, hatred, envy, jealousy, greed, self-indulgence, laziness, and pride were all anti-life.

“Love, heroism, self-sacrifice, sympathy, mercy, integrity, and creative faith, on the other hand, were the essence of life, turning mere existence into living in its truest sense.

“These were the gifts of God to men.”
 

* Read more about Ernest Gordon’s life story in the classic book,
Through the Valley of the Kwai, Harper & Row, 1962.
 

Question: what ways have you seen the “essence of life” at work?

14 comments:

The Ashenbrenner's said...

Thank you, Marc.

Kaylee said...

What a story. It certainly makes you think...

Nick said...

So true ... thanks.

Sean said...

This story is depicted in the movie "To End All Wars". I would highly recommend watching this movie...It is a movie that will definitely have an impact on you. Thanks, Marcus

MB said...

Thanks Sean. Will check it out.

Donna Pyle said...

What a powerful story, Marcus. I cannot help but wonder if the guard who beat the man to death ever realized the significance of what transpired. The same thing occurred to me when I read Elie Wiesel's "Night" about similar life/death struggles to survive in German concentration camps. There's no part of me that truly understands that scenario because it must be lived. And survived. But understanding the sacrifice of one to save the masses hits home deep. Oftentimes, I find myself shocked by mankind's depravity -- yet even more so at God's level of grace displayed through those same broken vessels.

MB said...

Good thoughts, Donna, thanks. As you say, "Night" is a similarly powerful book, one anyone should read.

mentorman said...

Exceptional...thank you! Absorbing this for myself...AND...sending it on to those I mentor. Powerful. Keep these thoughts coming. Again...thanx!

MB said...

Thanks so much, mentorman.

Yuri said...

Hello Marcus, great impressive story. I remember it from to End all Wars, and I have also read
the book, Through the Valley of the Kwai. In 2001, I have visited the River Kwai area, and I have
walked over the Bridge, visited the museum, and heard a talk from one of the survivors. It is very impressive to walk around there. I find it very hard to answer the question here, about in what ways I have seen the essence of life at work. My work seems like such a paradise after this story. Sitting at a desk, drinking coffee, using the computer, a roof above my head, a great, friendly boss.
So..maybe the essence of life is just that: working together with a nice group of people. A boss who values you for who you are and what you know, and can do. Colleagues that are nice to work with. That might be it? The essence of life is working together with my boss and colleagues and finding ways to help each other out when there is a certain problem. A small "sacrifice" to help each other out might be working overtime to finish up a project maybe. Again, we can't really compare these situations, but it sure is something to think about. Nice blog again!

MB said...

Thanks Yuri ... I like your line,

"My work seems like such a paradise after this story. Sitting at a desk, drinking coffee, using the computer, a roof above my head, a great, friendly boss."

Undoubtedly, gratefulness is part of the essence of life. One of the components that elevate life away from the law of the jungle, as Gordon described.

Good thoughts from you, again. --MB


Yuri said...

Thanks, and yes, gratefulness is part of the essence of life..I agree.
Again...my interest in World War 2 made me very aware to be grateful in life. My freedom came at such a high price.

Tobias (GER) said...

Very touching story Marcus. It reminds me of Joe Mann who died during WWII in the area of Best (Netherlands), saving his buddies around by throwing himself over a german live grenade. At that point he already was wounded 4 times and his army were bandaged to his body.

And again I'm with Yuri here!

T

Tobias (GER) said...
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