March 19, 2010 11:48 AM

WWII Vet Corrects Historical Record

(AP)  For 68 years, John E. Love has been haunted by the memory of carrying fallen comrades to a mass grave hollowed out of a Filipino rice field. Now, at last, a bit of history is being rewritten because of those memories.

After six months of research, The Associated Press this week is correcting the caption on one of the most famous photos in its library, 65 years after the image first moved on the newswire. The image shows defeated Allied soldiers after their surrender to Japanese forces on the Philippines' Bataan Peninsula in April 1942.

Over the years, the photo - which shows a procession of men walking down a dirt road, bearing bodies in blankets hung from bamboo poles - has become perhaps the most widely published image of what came to be known as the Bataan Death March.

But for many of those years, Love, a native of Albuquerque, New Mexico, who fought to defend Bataan as a 19-year-old Army corporal, saw captions paired with the photo that he believed did a disservice to the truth.

Last August, Love picked up the Albuquerque Journal and saw the photo again, together with a front-page story about Bataan survivors. He called the newspaper and told an editor the caption was wrong. It described the scene as part of the infamous Death March, a forced six-day march by Japanese captors of 12,000 Americans and more than 66,000 Filipino prisoners across the peninsula. Thousands died in the march; some were killed by captors impatient with their progess, other succumbed to a lack of food, water and medical treatment.

"That picture is not of the Death March," says Love, now 87. "The Japanese would not have tolerated a bunch of slow marching guys carrying their own dead. They wouldn't have tolerated it just one New York minute."

A Journal reporter, Charles D. Brunt, found other local Bataan survivors who agreed, wrote a story about the conflicting information and contacted AP, the source of both the photo and the caption. That launched the co-operative's own investigation of the photo, originally supplied to news services by the U.S. military after it was confiscated from defeated Japanese forces.

Deep in the AP library of millions of photos, the caption filed with a negative in 1945 identified the image as showing U.S. and Filipino forces carrying war casualties as they neared the end of the death march and approached Camp O'Donnell, where prisoners of war were held.

AP archivists contacted the Pentagon. Eventually, that led to the original photograph, on file in the National Archives in Washington, D.C. The catalogue recorded it as a photo of American prisoners using improvised litters to carry comrades. But a note filed along with the image, date unknown, said that, according to a retired U.S. Army colonel, the photo was not of the death march, but of the burial detail in the weeks that followed.

(AP Photo/The Albuquerque Journal)
That's exactly the way Love, seen at left, had long recalled it.

"We rounded up bamboo poles ... and we confiscated what blankets we could from the incoming prisoners. We told them we had to have them. The guys were dying faster than we could dig graves or carry them," Love said. "We carried them 1,000 yards (meters) and we would just unload the blankets there and the guys would fall out into the graves. I did that every day until the late hours of the evening for six weeks."

After discussing the evidence, AP decided to correct the caption. It now reads, in part, "At the time of its release, this photo was identified as dead and wounded being carried by fellow prisoners during the Bataan Death March in April 1942 ... Subsequent information from military archivists, the National Archives and Records Administration, and surviving prisoners, strongly suggests that this photo may actually depict a burial detail at Camp O'Donnell."

It is rare for the news service to correct the information filed with a historical photo, said Valerie Komor, director of the AP Corporate Archives. There are many images in storage, and any individual photograph is likely to be re-examined only if someone calls it into question. But that does not mean the first draft of history cannot be rewritten.

"I'm glad we came to a resolution for these veterans who understandably take it very seriously, as well they should," said Chuck Zoeller, a longtime director of the AP Photo Library who now works on the corporate communications staff. "I'm glad there's some satisfaction for them in it."

The new caption does not change history. It merely revises a footnote, 68 long years after the fact.

But on Wednesday, when Love recalled his experience at Bataan and his insistence that it be recorded correctly, his voice broke and his eyes welled with tears.

"I did it for the guys that I buried," he said. "We owed it to them."

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 16 Comments
by Another_Devil_Advocate March 21, 2010 12:25 PM EDT
...may we never forget the horror and cruelty of this famous Bataan march...for the deaths and sacrifices of all Americans and Filipino soldiers in the Philippine islands who fought and died for the freedom of their generation and to all generations to come...
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by rwsmith29456 March 20, 2010 8:33 PM EDT
I'm glad this man came forward. Anything I've heard about the Bataan death march says that the Japanese shot anybody who straggled and left them on the side of the road. If anyone tried to help them they were beaten or shot, too. Actually, I've seen and read quite a lot about the death march and have never seen this picture so captioned. Mistakes creep in and it's good to keep things as true as possible.
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by fariborzzak March 20, 2010 3:41 AM EDT
What about the Holocaust? is there any new story about that?Could any VET tell us the truth about that?
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by rwsmith29456 March 20, 2010 8:50 PM EDT
No, same old story. A LOT of people were starved, diseased, abused, killed and burned and buried in mass graves. I've met survivors, tattoo and all, and have heard vets talk about liberating the camps. When I was in college a lot of retired WWII vets were using their benefits to go to school and I was priveleged to have gotten to know many of them. A good friend of mine had a picture of the original flag flying on Iwo Jima, not the famous re-enacted version. I wouldn't expect to hear much new news in the holocaust department. In fact, as more people speak out it's about more horrors that they couldn't bring themselves to talk about for 60 years. If you want to know more, read history books, not this revisionist crud that has been perpetrated over the phonynet.
by cubscout09 March 19, 2010 10:22 PM EDT
I used to do yard work for a Bataan Death March survivor. When repatriated at the end of the war, he was so emaciated and malnourished that he could no longer stand or walk. He walked with the aid of a pair of canes for the rest of his life. Amazingly, he bore no ill will toward the Japanese for what had been done to him. He was the kind of person our community turned toward for guidance and protection. His annuities finance an annual scholarship for high school students long after his passing. Bless-you, Bill.
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by hazugajj March 19, 2010 9:15 PM EDT
As one boy scout of America in the troop on our former navy base in the Philippines that went hiking the Bataan march each year my dad worked in Subic, I saw a beautiful Phillipine landscape that had many reminders of our military's sacrifices. There were commemorative mile markers about every 10 miles, monuments to American and Filipino fighters and friendly locals. In this bamboo hut of a restaurant the staff served us with silver trays and fine china. It was also interesting that in other areas of the route there were Japanese shrines and rows of bamboo stakes engraved with Kanji. Definitely a far cry from how Mr. Love experienced Bataan.
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by Overruled1 March 19, 2010 6:35 PM EDT
My friends' father was at Pearl Harbor in the merchant service. He enlisted in the navy after that and served in every branch of service to even retire as a civilian employee.

He hated Japanese.
I couldn't imagine why...
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by Overruled1 March 19, 2010 6:33 PM EDT
My friends' father was at Pearl Harbor in the merchant service. He enlisted in the navy after that and served in every branch of service to even retire as a civilian employee.

He hated Japanese.
I couldn't imagine why...

If he were alive he'd be mortified to see the situation the US is in economically...he'd say we were betrayed....but that's my view...
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by lisachamp March 19, 2010 1:05 PM EDT
My uncle, Eugene Laird, was in the Bataan Death march......and it affected him until the day he died (late 1970's). He normally would/could not talk about it all, but twice he did discuss it with my mom (his sister-in-law). I don't know what what was said, but he must have thought a lot of her to open up about something so painful.
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by ToolMangler1 March 19, 2010 5:55 PM EDT
I remember a neighbor who lived across the valley being brought home at the end of the war. He was a Death March survivor, but his mind was gone and he had to wear diapers and be fed like a baby. I had 5 uncles in WWII and one of them was among the first in the gates at Buchenwald. He was in the 89th infantry.
by rocketjl March 19, 2010 12:46 PM EDT
Please forward to Mr. Tom Hanks and ask him if this is what he meant when he said we were upset with the Japanese.
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by consh8theusa March 19, 2010 6:07 PM EDT
Or maybe you could reprint it next to one of the aftermath photos of Hiroshima or Nagasaki.
by Another_Devil_Advocate March 19, 2010 12:03 PM EDT
...may we never forget the horror and cruelty of this famous Bataan march...the deaths and sacrifices of all Americans and Filipino soldiers who fought and died for the freedom of their generation and to all generation to come...
Reply to this comment
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