The attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th of 1941 represented the initial step of the Japanese military onslaught of Southeast Asia. The following day, the Japanese continued their aggressive military strategy in the Pacific, targeting American and European holdings in Southeast Asia.
From December 8th, 1941, to May of 1942, the Japanese campaign in the Philippines resulted in both the Japanese occupation of the Philippine Islands and the ultimate surrender of both Filipino and American troops. It is estimated that 80,000 Filipino and American soldiers were forced to relocate and enter
POW camps throughout the island of Luzon - if they survived the horrors of the Bataan Death March.
The Japanese maltreatment of the Filipino and American POWs was visible to Philippine citizens, who witnessed first-hand the Bataan Death March as it passed them by. The Philippine civilians who witnessed the brutality and killing of POWs as they marched to the prison camps were themselves vulnerable to the merciless cruelty of the Japanese military. Filipino men and women who attempted to give food or water to the marchers were wounded or killed - usually bayoneted - as a result of their actions.
The Bataan Death March would serve as the precursor to the Japanese Imperial Military's brutal treatment of the Philippine citizenry throughout the islands. The visible signs of maltreatment, the aggressive removal of civil liberties, the torture and capture of Filipino citizens who sympathized with the Allies, and the immediate severing of foreign relations and aide would spur a grassroots movement to resist the Japanese
occupation of the Philippine Islands.
The roots of the Philippine Resistance represented the cultural and socio-economic diversity of the Philippine Islands. From socialist peasant farmers, middle school teachers, ROTC youths, to Moro (Philippine Muslim) warriors, the range and inclusivity of the men and women who participated in the struggle against the Japanese Imperial Army was seemingly inexhaustible.
Women guerrilla fighters especially made major contributions to the liberation of the Philippines, but unfortunately, much like the guerrilla fighters from the Islands" ethnic minorities, have received less acknowledgment and discussion in the history of the Pacific Theater during World War II.
The Philippines, during the early half of the twentieth century, witnessed few advances in women's rights. But with the threat of war and the encroachment of the Japanese Imperial Army, the patriarchal and religiously conservative culture of the Philippines could not afford to maintain its traditional standards regarding gender.
The grassroots resistance drew heavily on the patriotic fervor of many Filipinas who saw the guerrilla resistance as an opportunity to liberate their homeland as well as prove the capabilities of their sex.
Their guerrilla efforts proved women were more than capable of taking on numerous roles: soldiers, leaders, activists, journalists, nurses, doctors, spies, and dedicated patriots. Filipina guerrillas proved to be a vital aspect of both the soldiering and reconnaissance missions that allowed the Allies an opportunity to retake the Philippines.
Historians estimate that for every ten male guerrillas, one Filipina guerrilla served in the underground resistance. Over 260,000 male Filipino guerrillas served the resistance effort. This number reflects how Filipinas have been neglected in the history of the war, or who, because of their status as women, were not officially counted as serving, and that female guerrillas represented possibly more than 10% of the resistance force.
These statistics, given the few surviving resources available regarding Filipina guerrilla efforts, brings to light the missing narratives of a traditionally very American-centered written history on the liberation of the Philippines of World War II. The wartime experiences of women of color in the Pacific provide opportunities to address the various contributions, struggles, and cultural diversity that aided and represented the Allied front of the Pacific.
Filipina guerrillas, similar to their male peers, were aware of the risks and the ultimate sacrifice they would have to make in their efforts to push the Japanese Imperial Army out of their homeland. One of the added fears and risks that Filipinas shared that their male peers did not was the threat of rape and being forcibly used as 'comfort' women (sex slaves) for the Japanese Imperial Army.
Despite the risks of death, torture, and rape, the Filipina guerrillas of the Philippine Resistance gave themselves selflessly and heroically to the cause of both the liberation of their people from the Japanese imperial regime and to the progress of women's rights in Southeast Asia.
Filipina guerrillas took on various roles. Many served as medical aides or nurses. The late Dorothy Dowlen, a Filipina mestiza (mixed ancestry of Philippine and European heritage) born and raised in Mindanao, served as a medical aide helping Allied soldiers and guerrilla fighters while helping her own family escape the brutalities of the Japanese invasion.
Filipina nurses provided needed medical help for struggling American soldiers who escaped the POW camps throughout the Philippine Islands. Filipina nurses and doctors such as Bruna Calvan, Carmen Lanot, and Dr. Guedelia Pablan would continue to help civilians, soldiers, and POWs in the region surrounding Bataan despite the loss of their hospital and lack of supplies and food.
Risking their lives to smuggle medicine into POW camps and maintain their self-built health centers (nipa huts), Filipina guerrillas and female resistance supporters helped not only to physically heal the wounded but strengthened community and soldier morale to better fight the Japanese invaders.
Often, Filipina nurses used their medical training to assist other guerrilla groups such as the WAS (Women's Auxiliary Service), led and founded by Josefa Capistrano, a Chinese-Filipina mestiza would be one of the first Filipinas to establish and train women as soldiers, nurses, and spies, schooling them in methods of reconnaissance and the use of firearms and self-defense.
Capistrano's female troops served under the tenth military district in Mindanao and would also supply the guerrillas and local communities with food, medical, and military supplies. In 1963, the WAS would be renamed the WAC (Women's Auxiliary Corps) and would become an official military branch of the Philippine Army managed by women for women.
Other Filipina guerrillas undertook reconnaissance missions, establishing guerrilla networks throughout the Philippine archipelago, maintaining contact with the Allied forces, and thwarting Japanese propaganda efforts (film, radio broadcasts, newspapers, pamphlets) seeking to win over the Philippine people"s support. Filipina guerrillas like Colonel Yay Panlilio served as a radio and newspaper journalist while fighting alongside and leading her very own unit of male guerrillas under the Markings Guerrilla troops on the island of Luzon.
Panlilio used her journalist skills to cleverly hide resistance messages in public radio announcements. She also documented and maintained guerrilla activities, relaying information to the Allied forces and to other guerrilla organizations. Panlilio also routed out undercover Filipino collaborators (makapili) who sought to paint the Philippine Resistance as detrimental to Imperial Japan's efforts to absorb the Philippines into a "friendly" pan-Asia.
These courageous women broke their society's gender norms while playing a central role in ultimately liberating their homeland from Japanese imperialism.
And they did so while promoting the abilities, talents, and skillsets women were capable of in a male-centered society. Through their sacrifices, Filipina resistance fighters like Josefa Capistrano championed gender and racial equality as one of the goals for their resistance efforts.
Capistrano would not accept honorable mentions or awards for her efforts until the Philippine government recognized the WAC as an official branch of the military. Most importantly, their contributions in the Pacific Theater demonstrated the many strengths of past colonial territories who were undoubtedly deserving and capable of self-governance in the post-war era.
Twenty-five years after her passing, Audrey Hepburn remains the most beloved of all Hollywood stars, known as much for her role as UNICEF ambassador as for films like Roman Holiday and Breakfast at Tiffany's. Several biographies have chronicled her stardom, but none has covered her intense experiences through five years of Nazi occupation in the Netherlands. According to her son, Luca Dotti, "The war made my mother who she was."
Audrey Hepburn's war included participation in the Dutch Resistance, working as a doctor's assistant during the "Bridge Too Far" battle of Arnhem, the brutal execution of her uncle, and the ordeal of the Hunger Winter of 1944. She also had to contend with the fact that her father was a Nazi agent and her mother was pro-Nazi for the first two years of the occupation. But the war years also brought triumphs as Audrey became Arnhem's most famous young ballerina.
Audrey's own reminiscences, new interviews with people who knew her in the war, wartime diaries, and research in classified Dutch archives shed light on the riveting, untold story of Audrey Hepburn under fire in World War II. Also included is a section of color and black-and-white photos. Many of these images are from Audrey's personal collection and are published here for the first time.
Reader's Reviews
The author did an amazing amount of research on Ms. Hepburn's background. This was a difficult read. No one wants to admit that their mother supported Adolf Hitler and the Nazis, especially when they are later trapped by the same man that they had once supported. Clearly, Audrey Hepburn was a very young girl when her mother traveled to Nuremberg to attend Hitler's rally, and to meet Hitler. And, she was a young girl when she danced for the Nazi troops who had overrun her home country of The Netherlands. She was only a couple of years older when she worked for the Dutch resistance against these Nazis, risking her life to help rid her homeland of them. The fact that she survived the near-starvation and the violent acts of war was miraculous. She was an amazingly brave and heroic teen. After the war, she had to shut down many questions, due to her mother's dubious Nazi leanings prior to the war, and her mother's actions during the first two years of World War II. This was an excellent book, and I urge everyone to read it.
~Richard R.
Excellent story told honestly. I found the background of family members somewhat superfluous for my interests but overall the book is well written. This book also clarified the story of Operation Market Garden which was a disaster. General Montgomery had his own ideas and the book does not clarify why help was not more immediate from allies in the south.
An interesting sidelight is how JE Hoover and FBI managed to get Hepburn's mother back to the US after her investigation by Dutch authorities for Nazi sympathies. This aspect is, however, treated honestly and fairly. Not surprised that Audrey's father a Nazi sympathizer abandoned the family and when released went to Ireland to live - not welcome back in the Netherlands.
~Ronald Turco
Matzen does a remarkable job describing WWII from Audrey's point of view, showcasing his researching capabilities but still respecting the subject and its heroes. I knew Audrey had grown up in the war, that she had danced to raised funds and carried messages for hidden soldiers. I did not know, however, just what it meant to be "occupied" by the Nazis. Matzen beautifully portrays Audrey and Arnhem's heartbreak and perseverance during one of the darkest times in history.
~ Shannon
If you're an Audrey Hepburn fan (and how could you not be?), this is a "must-read" - an absorbing account of her early life, with a particular focus on her time in the Netherlands during the war, going through a very harrowing experience that she would be fairly vague about during the rest of her life. It is definitely worth reading.
~Don Donahue
About the Author
Robert Matzen is the award-winning author of Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe, Fireball: Carole Lombard and the Mystery of Flight 3, and five other books. He has appeared on national broadcast programs and his byline has appeared in the Wall Street Journal among other publications.
Robert Matzen is an award-winning American author who specializes in Hollywood history and World War II. He uses creative fiction techniques to translate meticulous research into a narrative that draws readers in. His eighth book, "Dutch Girl: Audrey Hepburn in World War II," was released by Good Knight Books in April 2019. His seventh, "Mission: Jimmy Stewart and the Fight for Europe," shot to bestseller status during the 2016 holiday season and earned national media coverage, including an essay by Robert in the Wall Street Journal. He toured with the book at venues across the United States through 2017.
With every book, Matzen gets personal with history. For "Dutch Girl" this meant spending weeks in the Netherlands talking to the people who lived through the war with Audrey Hepburn. For "Mission" he flew in B-17 and B-24 bombers and walked the muddy fields of Jimmy Stewart's base at Tibenham, England. And for "Fireball" he famously climbed a mountain-Mount Potosi, Nevada-to explore the wreckage of Carole Lombard's TWA Flight 3.