My Grandfather Was a Rōmusha
Giovanni Gaggino
Time Zone Changes
Leading the National Library
Clean and Green Champion
Before Air Conditioning
Lost Family
Negotiating OB Markers
Hawkins Road Refugee Camp
The National Anthem
Pioneer Spy Chief
Hawker Culture in Singapore
A Miracle-working Grave
The Pioneering Deaf Educator
The 1952 Bali Trip
More Than Mr Mari Kita
Set in 1920s Singapore
Singaporean Animals
Asian Port Cities
He Wrote the National Pledge
Stella Kon
Eurasian Cuisine
Peranakan Indians
Vegetarianism
A Cultural Guardian
Kampong Gelam
Kueh Pie Tee
A Boxing Superstar
A Local Olympian
Wartime Entertainers
Film Heritage
The Lost Gold Coins
The German Girl Shrine
A 60-metre-long Painting
A Singaporean Historical Epic
Orang Seletar
Kranji War Cemetery
Singapore's Recording Industry
Shrines on Kusu Island
Sarong Island
Beyond Firewalking
Stone Age in Singapore
Malaya's Prewar Tennis Greats
Belacan
Paya Lebar's Lost Murals
Taoist Folk Goddesses
Rōmusha of WWII
During World War II, forced civilian labourers known as rōmusha were used by the Imperial Japanese Army to build the infamous Thai-Burma Railway. Shirlene Noordin pieces together what happened to her grandfather in the three years he worked on the Death Railway.
Listen to the Full Episode
Available on: Spotify, Apple Podcasts, melisten
Subscribe to get notified when the next episode drops.
About the Guest
Shirlene Noordin is the founder of Phish Communications, a communications consultancy specialising in arts and culture.
Resources
Shirlene Noordin, “My Grandfather Was a Rōmusha,” BiblioAsia 18, no. 3 (2016).
Robert Hardie, The Burma-Siam Railway: The Secret Diary of Dr. Robert Hardie, 1942–1945 (London: Imperial War Museum, 1984, c1983). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RCLOS 940.5425 HAR-[JSB])
Clifford Kinvig, River Kwai Railway: The Story of the Burma-Siam Railroad (London: Brassey’s, 1992). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 940.5472592 KIN-[WAR])
Takuma Melber, “The Labour Recruitment of Local Inhabitants as Rōmusha in Japanese-Occupied South East Asia,” International Review of Social History 61, no. 4 (2016): 165–85. (From JSTOR via NLB’s eResources website)
Credits
This episode of BiblioAsia+ was hosted by Jimmy Yap and produced by Soh Gek Han. Sound engineering was done by Gibson Analytics. The background music “Di Tanjong Katong” was composed by Ahmad Patek and performed by Chords Haven. Special thanks to Shirlene Noordin and her family for sharing their story.
BiblioAsia+ is a podcast about Singapore history by the National Library Singapore.