“We are not retreating. We are advancing in another direction.”
“It is fatal to enter any war without the will to win it.”
“Old soldiers never die; they just fade away.
“The soldier, above all other people, prays for peace,
for he must suffer and be the deepest wounds and scars of war.”
“May God have mercy upon my enemies, because I won't .” “The object of war is not to die for your country but to make the other bastard die for his.
“Nobody ever defended anything successfully, there is only attack and attack and attack some more.
“Fixed fortifications are a monument to the stupidity of man." “It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived.
The 1943 multi-ethnic Jesselton Uprising in Sabah By Ranjit Singh Malhi
Saturday, July 08, 2023
Malaysiakini : Calling themselves the Kinabalu Guerrillas and headquartered in
Menggatal, Sabahans of diverse ethnic origins participated in and
supported the revolt - local Chinese, indigenous communities (Bajaus,
Suluks, Dusuns, Muruts, and Binadans), Eurasians (including Charles
Peter and Jules Stephens), and Sikhs (Subedar Dewa Singh, Sergeant Budh
Singh, and Corporal Sohan Singh).
To top it all off, one of its most flamboyant guerrillas was a Ceylon Tamil, Rajah George Sinnadurai.
Their leader, Albert Kwok, a young and energetic Kuching-born (1921) Teochew Chinese, was educated in Shanghai, China.
He worked with the China Red Cross and also served under the Kuomintang during the Second Sino-Japanese War 1937‒1945.
Kwok
returned to Borneo in late 1940 and moved to Jesselton (present-day
Kota Kinabalu) in May 1941 where he started his successful traditional
healing practice of treating piles.
Among the leading Kinabalu
Guerrillas were Kong Sze Phui, Lim Keng Fatt, Li Tet Phui (a former
lieutenant in the North Borneo Volunteer Force), Tsen Tsau Kong, Charles
Peter (a former chief police officer), Jules Stephens (a former
sergeant in the North Borneo Volunteer Force who served as the Adjutant
of the Kinabalu Guerrillas), Duallis (a Murut and former chief inspector
of the North Borneo Armed Constabulary), Musah (a Dusun native chief of
Membakut), Orang Tua Panglima Ali (a Bajau village chief of Suluk
Island), and Orang Tua Arshad of Oudar Island.
By way of historical background, it should be noted that the Jesselton Uprising occurred at the height of the Second World War.
The
Japanese conquest of Sabah began with the invasion of Labuan on Jan 1,
1942. Eight days later, they took over Jesselton. By Feb 1, 1942, the
Japanese were in full control of Sabah.
During the war, guerrilla groups in the Philippines which were controlled by the Americans extended their influence to Sabah.
Through
Lim, a prosperous businessperson, Kwok befriended a Sulu, Imam
Marajukim, who was in close contact with Alejandro Suarez, a guerrilla
leader in the Philippines. Kwok visited Suarez in early 1943 and learnt
about guerrilla warfare techniques.
What caused the uprising
Let’s now delve briefly into the major causes of the 1943 Jesselton Uprising.
During
Japanese rule in Sabah, the Chinese community suffered the most.
Several Japanese companies seized control of most of the businesses in
Sabah which severely affected the Chinese entrepreneurs.
The
Japanese also coerced the Chinese to raise funds for Japan’s war
efforts. Towards this end, the Jesselton Chinese raised $600,000 while
the Sandakan Chinese raised $400,000.
What further angered the
Chinese community was that their leaders, who were involved in the China
Relief Fund, were arrested by the Japanese and imprisoned in Kuching.
In
the case of the other ethnic groups, they were also hugely opposed to
Japanese rule in Sabah primarily due to the scarcity of essential
foodstuffs (particularly rice), recruitment of conscripted labourers,
and forced recruitment of native women to serve as comfort women in
Japanese military brothels.
It should be noted that Chinese
nationalism also played its part in the outbreak of the revolt due to
Japanese atrocities in China during the Second Sino-Japanese War.
Ooi
Keat Gin, in his book titled ‘The Japanese Occupation of Borneo,
1941‒1945’, concludes that “the spark of the Kinabalu Uprising of
October 1943 was ignited by Chinese nationalism and was fanned by the
sufferings of the indigenous communities”.
What apparently
hastened and precipitated the outbreak of the Jesselton Uprising was the
general belief among the Chinese community that the Japanese were
planning to conscript about 3,000 Chinese youths for military service
and a large number of Chinese females to serve as comfort women.
No
one really knows for sure what was Kwok’s actual plan in leading the
revolt. Most likely, as suggested by FG Whelan in his book ‘Stories from
Sabah History’, he hoped that his strike against the Japanese at
Jesselton would spur other groups to resist Japanese rule.
The attack
He
might have further hoped to retreat to his hideout, wait for arms and
supplies from Suarez, and subsequently obtain assistance from the Allied
forces.
On the night of Oct 9, 1943, the Kinabalu Guerrillas,
comprising about 100 Chinese armed mostly with parangs, launched their
attack on the Japanese.
The first attack was made on the Tuaran
police station. The guerrillas managed to kill four Japanese police
personnel and seized six rifles and some ammunition.
The second
attack, according to Maxwell Hall in his book titled “Kinabalu
Guerrillas: An Account of the Double Tenth 1943”, was made on the
Japanese police station at Menggatal. Fifteen Japanese and three native
police officers were killed.
Subsequently, the Kinabalu Guerrillas
attacked Jesselton at about 10pm. This land attack by the Chinese was
supported by a sea force of more than 100 indigenous people (Bajaus,
Suluks, Dusuns, and Binadans) who were gathered together by Orang Tua
Panglima Ali of Suluk Island.
He was ably assisted by Orang Tua
Arshad, Jemalul of Mantanani Island, and Saruddin of Dinawan Island. The
islanders attacked the military stations and burnt the Customs sheds
hoping to attract the attention of Allied ships in the area –
unfortunately, there were none. The whole operation took about three
hours.
On Oct 10, 1943 (National Day of the Chinese Republic), the
Kinabalu Guerrillas celebrated their glorious, albeit short-lived,
victory by parading flags – the Chinese national flag, Sabah Jack, Union
Jack, and the Stars and Stripes - on all the major buildings from
Jesselton to Tuaran.
Following their initial success, on Oct 12,
1943, a small force of 12 men (the majority of them being Dusuns of
Tambunan) under Rajah George Sinnadurai set out to capture Kota Belud.
They
ran into three armed Japanese at Tenghilan and managed to kill them,
one of whom was Ishikawa, the Jesselton police chief who managed to
escape during the earlier attack on the night of Oct 9.
Rajah
George then rode in style to Kota Belud town donning Ishikawa’s riding
boots and his samurai sword. The four captured Japanese in Kota Belud
were executed. All in all, the Kinabalu Guerrillas had killed about 50
Japanese.
The Japanese retaliate…brutally
The Japanese response to the uprising came almost immediately and viciously.
Beginning
Oct 13, 1943, the Japanese counter-attacked mercilessly. Coastal
villages along the Tuaran road were bombed and machine-gunned, as a
result of which about 3,000 civilians were killed indiscriminately.
Japanese
troops reoccupied Jesselton. Kwok surrendered on Dec 19, 1943, with the
hope that the Japanese would not persecute other Sabahans.
Ten
days later, Lim arrived off Sabah’s coast with arms and men from Suarez
to assist the Kinabalu Guerrillas. He did not land as Kwok had already
surrendered.
Around the end of October 1943, the Japanese attacked Suluk Island, set fire to all the houses and killed all the men.
The
women were taken away and forced to work in the rice fields of
Bongawan. It should be noted that when the British landed on Suluk
Island in 1945, there were no adult males. An 11-year-old boy was the
headman.
The Japanese also attacked Oudar Island and massacred 29 people.
On
Jan 21, 1944, Kwok, with 175 others including Kong, Li, Charles, Tsen,
Stephens, Panglima Ali, Rajah George, Budh Singh, and Sohan Singh were
executed by the Japanese at Petagas.
Another 131 people were
imprisoned at Labuan, out of whom only nine remained alive at the time
of Sabah’s liberation by Allied forces.
Japanese atrocities did
not stop with the Petagas executions. On Feb 11, 1944, the Japanese
visited Mantanani Island and arrested 58 Sulus who were taken to
Jesselton. Most of them died at the Batu Tiga Prison.
Two days later, the Japanese revisited the island and massacred about 80 people.
It
should be noted that Duallis and his Murut followers continued
guerrilla warfare against the Japanese until the Allied forces liberated
Sabah from Japanese rule.
In recognition of the Kinabalu Guerrillas’ struggle, the Sabah government has built a war memorial at Petagas.
In
honour of their sacrifices, an annual remembrance ceremony is held on
Jan 21 at the Petagas War Memorial. Additionally, two streets in Sabah
are named after Kwok and Li.
To conclude, the multi-ethnic 1943 Jesselton Uprising must be given its rightful place in our school history textbooks.
This
was no ordinary resistance. It is a testament to the rare occasion in
our history when ordinary Sabahans of different ethnic backgrounds came
together for a noble cause.
To paraphrase FG Whelan, hundreds of
Sabahans under the heroic leadership of Kwok fought bravely and
sacrificed their lives so that others could live in liberty and peace.