This is Simone Boyce from The Bright Side. Beauty is about more than just beauty. It's about worth, individuality, and the power that comes from being your truest self. At L'Oréal Paris, beauty means embracing who you already are, enhancing the diverse features, experiences, and personality that makes you, well, you. L'Oréal's beauty essentials combine innovative products with that classic Parisian touch to help you feel like your most confident self.
Because taking on the world is a little less scary when you feel ready for your close-up. L'Oréal Paris, because you're worth it. Navy Federal Credit Union. With the new Cash Rewards Plus card, you can keep things pretty simple. Simple, like unlimited two percent cash back on every purchase.
No spin categories. And now, when you spend $2k, you get $200 and a Walmart Plus annual membership. The new Cash Rewards Plus card. Learn more at NavyFederal.org. Navy Federal Credit Union. Their members are the mission. Navy Federal is insured by NCUA. What's it like to get the new iPhone 16 Pro with AT&T next up anytime?
It's like when you first light up the grill and think of all the mouth-watering possibilities. Learn how to get the new iPhone 16 Pro with Apple Intelligence on AT&T and the latest iPhone every year with AT&T next up anytime. AT&T.
Connecting changes everything. Apple Intelligence coming fall 2024 with Siri and device language set to US English. Some features and languages will be coming over the next year. Zero dollar offer may not be available on future iPhones. Next up, anytime feature may be discontinued at any time. Subject to change additional fees, terms and restrictions apply.
See AT&T.com slash iPhone for details. One in three women and one in four men experienced domestic abuse in their lifetime and nearly half of survivors delay leaving because they can't bring their pets with them. Purina started the Purple Leash Project to help eliminate one of the many barriers domestic abuse survivors face. A lack of pet friendly domestic violence shelters. Through the Purple Leash Project Purina is helping to create more pet friendly domestic violence shelters across the country so abuse survivors and their pets can escape and heal together.
Visit purina.com slash purple to get involved. This is Lee Habib and this is Our American Stories, the show where America is the star and the American people. Most of us know that on December 7, 1941, the Empire of Japan launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. However, let's know that hours later on December 8, 1941, the Empire of Japan launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor.
However, let's know that hours later on December 8, they also invaded the Philippines, a U.S. territory at the time. One of those soldiers in the Philippines was the late Dr. Lester Tenney. Here's Dr. Tenney at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans telling his story. We'd like to thank the museum for graciously allowing us to use this audio. Let's get into the story.
Let me give you some information. The first tank battle of World War II was on December 23 at the city of Agou, A-G-O-O, up at Lingayen Gulf. General Wainwright asked for a company of tanks to meet the Japanese. When we got up to our bivouac area, our post-ordinance brought us enough gasoline for five tanks. And so five tanks went into battle instead of a company of tanks.
I know what I'm talking about. I was in one of the five tanks. Let me tell you something about tanks. For those of you who are not familiar with tanks, you don't, you can put that tank out of commission with one shell. One shell.
All you have to do is hit the track. Ben Morin was the lieutenant in charge of our lead tank. The lead tank was hit right away. Once it was hit in the turret, the second shell hit a track. The tank went to the right, ended up in a rice paddy. The four men in that tank were captured that day. The second tank was hit. A shell went through the tank and took the boat gunner's head right off and went out the back. Two tanks out of five put out of commission in three minutes. Our tanks had to turn around and head back toward Bataan. I will say that Ben Morin made the comment many months later that if he ever got out of that thing alive he was going to devote his life to God.
Ben Morin became a Jesuit priest. So tanks in the Philippines was not too bright. We ended up with the most unusual army. We had an air force without airplanes, a navy without ships, and soldiers without shoes. We had the old doughboy helmets. We were using Springfield rifles manufactured in 1917.
Ammunition manufactured in 1915, 16, and 17. When we were firing our guns we were hoping that one out of every four bullets would explode. That was the kind of war we had to fight at that time.
So it was a disaster for us really. And yet they told the fighters on Bataan and Corregidor that support was coming. It was not coming. I have a note here from the war department.
I think the end remark sort of tells the whole story. The end remark was that the relief of the Philippines will not be undertaken because it is impossible. Did you hear that? The war department decided that it was impossible to help us. Let me tell you what General MacArthur had to say. This is an instruction to all commanders. Inform your troops that supplies and ammunition are on their way.
Airplanes are coming in. Foot soldiers will be here soon. This man lied to us when he knew different. And so we fought the best we could. And Corregidor held out. That was a thorn in their side and they had to solve that problem. The Japanese had a flotilla of about 30,000 troops, tanks, flamethrowers, everything on their way to Australia. But the Japanese had to take their flotilla, turn it around, and come into Bataan.
They came in on April 3rd, the first emperor's birthday. And that's when the push started. And it was disaster.
The Japanese were absolutely stepping over their own dead bodies because they had to move forward and forward and forward. Now ladies and gentlemen, think for a moment. We were on a peninsula, three sides of water. Where were we going to go?
We had nothing left. By the 8th of April, everybody on Bataan was already down at the water's edge, at the water's edge. And on April 8th, General Wainwright on Corregidor, General King on Bataan received a message from Douglas MacArthur. The message said, this garrison will not capitulate.
If all else fails, you will charge the enemy. General King said, I cannot do that. If I do not surrender my forces tomorrow morning, Bataan will be down known and around the world as the worst disaster in the history of mankind. I can't do that to my troops.
I have to give some of them a chance to live. And so, General King gave instructions on the morning of April 9th. All forces on Bataan are to lay down their arms and surrender to the Japanese soldiers. It was a sad day.
Most people don't understand this. Let me tell you, the worst military defeat the United States ever had on Bataan, on April 9th. Bataan. 70,000 people were forced to surrender.
70,000 people. And yet, when we talk about Bataan, most people don't know what we're talking about. I gave a program some years ago and one woman came up to me at the very end.
She said, oh, I'm so glad I came. She said, when I heard it was going to be talking about Bataan twirling, I really wasn't interested at all. Bataan twirling. That's what somebody knew about Bataan.
We'll continue with Lester Tenney's story here on Our American Stories. Black Friday is coming. And for the adults in your life who love the coolest toys, well, there's something for them this year too. Bartesian is the premier craft cocktail maker that automatically makes more than 60 seasonal and classic cocktails, each in under 30 seconds at the push of a button. And right now, Bartesian is having a huge site-wide sale. You can get $100 off any cocktail maker or cocktail maker bundle when you spend $400 or more. So if the cocktail lover in your life has been good this year or the right kind of bad, get them Bartesian at the push of a button. Make bar quality cosmopolitans, martinis, manhattans, and more. All in just 30 seconds. All for $100 off. Amazing toys aren't just for kids. Get $100 off a cocktail maker when you spend $400 through Cyber Monday. Visit bartesian.com slash cocktail.
That's B-A-R-T-E-S-I-A-N dot com slash cocktail. Just a few years ago, only 3% of domestic violence shelters accepted pets, meaning many abuse survivors had to choose between a difficult situation for their pet or leaving their pet behind. One in three women and one in four men experience domestic abuse in their lifetime, and nearly half of survivors delay leaving because they can't bring their pets with them. Purina believes in the healing power of pets, particularly for survivors of abuse. They believe pets and people are better together, which is one of the many reasons they started the Purple Leash Project. Through the Purple Leash Project, Purina is helping break down one of the many barriers abuse survivors face, the lack of pet friendly domestic violence shelters. Purina has helped increase the amount of pet friendly shelters across the country from 3% to nearly 20% through the Purple Leash Project. With more pet friendly domestic violence shelters, survivors and their pets can escape and heal together.
Visit purina dot com slash purple to get involved. Buying a home can be overwhelming these days. From start to finish, Navy Federal Credit Union's new Home Buying Center has everything you need to get to closing with confidence, like verified pre-approval.
A pre-approval shows sellers you're a serious buyer, potentially giving you a competitive advantage when making an offer. Realty Plus connects you with an agent for continued support every step of the way. Lock and Shop lets you lock in your interest rate for up to 60 days while you shop.
No refi rate drop gives you peace of mind to buy now, knowing that if interest rates fall, you could decrease your rate without having to refinance for a small $250 fee. If you're overwhelmed by shopping for a new home, Navy Federal's new Home Buying Center has solutions for every step of the process. Learn more at navy federal dot org. Navy Federal Credit Union. Our members are the mission. Navy Federal is insured by NCUA Equal Housing Lender. Membership required. Terms and conditions apply. Loans subject to approval.
Call 1-888-842-6328 for details about credit costs. Here's to the holidays, to the smell of grandma's fresh baked casseroles, to bundling up by the fire with family and football. The Chinette brand wants you to savor all the joys of Turkey Day while skipping the hassle of cleanup with their Chinette Classic Collection.
And since Chinette Classic plates and bowls are compostable, you're not only keeping the sink clean, you're helping leave less of a mess behind for future generations. So here's to being together. Here's to us. All of us.
Find a local retailer at my Chinette dot com. Hey guys, it's Lance Bass from Frosted Tips. AJ McLean and I recently hit the Vegas Speedway to test drive the Hyundai IONIQ 5 in before the iHeart Radio Music Festival. We have an awesome episode recapping our experience out now.
Take a listen and thanks to Hyundai for making this possible. We got to do a timed race between the two of us. He might have beat me.
I won, although I did hit more cones. It's okay. Wait, that doesn't disqualify you? I think it disqualifies you. You know what, it's like splitting hairs here.
Let's just not be that. I think I deserve another tenth of a second. You did hit a cone though. Oh my practice run. So then we got to go follow a lead car on the main track. We got the car up to 115 miles per hour, which is the fastest I've ever gotten in my life. Weak.
Yeah, weak sauce. I do that. But I did hit, there's a very special button in the car. It's a little special red button that the second you press that button, you are literally like accelerating full torque, full speed, full horsepower. 641 horsepower. Yes.
Like instantly in like 10 seconds. This episode is presented by Hyundai. This is Lee Habib, host of Our American Stories. Every day on this show, we tell stories of history, faith, business, love, loss, and your stories. Send us your story, small or large, to email OAS at OurAmericanStories.com.
That's OAS at OurAmericanStories.com. We'd love to hear them and put them on the air. Our audience loves them too. And we return to Our American Stories and with the late Dr. Lester Tenney's story. Tenney is the author of My Hitch in Hell, The Baton Death March. When we last left off, Tenney was telling us about the largest surrender of troops in US history to the Japanese. Most of these men would be forced into the death march to the first prison camp they'd be held in. Let's return to the story.
Here again is Dr. Lester Tenney. So the war ended for us on April 9th. You have to understand that General King was doing things in violation of the military code. He was not following orders from his commander. His commander said, you will not capitulate.
You will charge the enemy. He capitulated. He did exactly what you were not supposed to do. He could have been court-martial. Let me share with you. Every officer was given a promotion, one rank promotion.
Every officer except General King. You know, they asked me if I wanted to have some pictures up on the screen. I have a lot of pictures, but there's no way that a picture could show you the anxiety, the frustration, the sadness of what went on in Bataan.
No pictures. And so I didn't bring any for that reason. And so that's a little bit of story leading up to the Bataan death march. I don't know why we call it a march.
I really don't. It wasn't a march. These were 12,000 sick men that were forced by the Japanese to walk to the first prison camp. It was called a death march not just because how many died, although out of the 12,000 Americans that were captured on Bataan, at the end of the war only 1,700 came home. Think about that, 12,000 to 1,700.
12,000 to 1,700. But that's not why it was called the Bataan death march. It was called the Bataan death march because of the way they died. If you stopped, you died. If you had a malaria attack, you died. If you just couldn't take another walk, another step, you died. If you had a defecate, you died. No food, no water is what they gave us.
Nothing. We were called lower than dogs. We were called cowards because we surrendered and that was part of the reason why we were treated so poorly because their philosophy was if you surrendered, you were lower than a dog because they would not surrender.
They would rather die for the emperor than to surrender. My nose was broken on the death march two or three times. My teeth were all knocked out. Thanks to the veteran's administration, I have something that's true now. The VA.
Thank you, Mr. VA. I had my nose broken. My teeth knocked out.
My head split open. The fourth day on the march, a Japanese officer was coming by on horseback, swinging his samurai sword, trying to see what kind of heads he could cut off. He missed my neck, but he slipped me down the back with his samurai sword. My friends, they carried me. They brought up a medic from the rear end who brought me up, sewed me up with needle and thread.
I don't know what he did, but they would not let me fall down. So I had my share of pain on the death march. And so now the march, 106, 107 degree, hot, no food, no water. On the side of the road in the Philippines, they have wallows. The wallows fill up with water. The caribou, the water buffer, they bathe in that wallow.
They do their duty in that wallow. And we're marching, and we're dying of thirst. And we see that water. We run over, spread the scum, and drink the water. Result, amoebic dysentery in the worst way. And so when we arrived in that first camp, O'Donnell, men started to die at 200, 250 a day. They were dying from the effects of the march. We had one artesian well, one artesian well popping up water, you know, O'Donnell, on the parade ground.
I saw men die with a canteen in their hand, waiting to get a drink of water. You know, I do this program in Japan. These kids know absolutely nothing about World War II.
Zero. They don't know a thing about World War II. And so when I go there, I made a decision.
I have to think of something. What can I tell these young people about the Japanese soldiers? Can I say they're all bad? They were all no good? No, I can't say that. Ladies and gentlemen, you might know right now, I have learned to forgive. I have forgiven the Japanese. Now you may think about that in terms of what I'm doing. Remember, I did it for me, not for them. I became free.
I became free. And you have to be strong to be able to forgive. It's only the weak ones that can't forgive, the strong are able to forgive. Let's go.
Strong are able to forgive. Let's get on with our life. And so here we were, at this particular time, having to try to survive. And I said to myself, how can I deal with these young people? And it came up to me. And I went to the Japanese people that I knew, and I questioned them, and I talked with them. And I came up with this answer.
Now, don't challenge me on it. This is my answer. Number one, most of the soldiers on baton came from little villages in Japan. And so they lived their little life in their little community, and that was all they was. No one spoke anything but what they spoke.
No one looked like anything but that they did. And that's how they lived their life. Now, all of a sudden, they're on baton. Their commanding officer says, we've got to move these people to that first prison camp.
If they don't move, kill them. And the commanding officer walks away. And this little Japanese private says, well, okay, I'll do that.
And so he sees this man fall down. And he says to the man in Japanese, hey, buddy, get up and move on. The American says, I don't know what you're talking about.
I don't speak your language. The Japanese says, did you hear me, fella? You get going there. I was told to make you go, because if you don't go, I have to kill you. And I don't want to kill you, so get going. The American sits there and says, I still don't understand you.
I just can't move. The little Japanese guard says, I guess I have to kill you. Bang. And that's it. Is that possible? Well, I don't know if it's possible. I don't want to pretend that I do.
I don't know. I just know that when I was able to say that to the Japanese students to make them realize that not everybody is bad, that there may be other reasons for it, one thing I was able to do was I was able to tell them all about baton, all about the horrors of war, about the POW life. I never would have been able to tell them that before. I tell the story that you hear today, what happened, how horrible it was that the Japanese did this. And so if you were able to survive the war, if you were able to survive the baton death march, if you were able to survive the war, if you're able to survive that first time in the camp, Camp O'Donnell, then they put us aboard a ship and took us to Japan. And we're listening to Dr. Lester Tenney tell his story of the baton death march.
He was there. And my goodness, it starts with 12,000 men and 1700 come home, but it was the way they died, Lester told that audience at the World War II Museum. And they were treated so poorly because we surrendered and the Japanese would rather die than surrender. So they saw our soldiers as less than human, like dogs.
When we come back, more of the story of the baton death march with Dr. Lester Tenney here on Our American Stories. Each in under 30 seconds at the push of a button. And right now, Bartesian is having a huge site-wide sale. You can get $100 off any cocktail maker or cocktail maker bundle when you spend $400 or more. So if the cocktail lover in your life has been good this year or the right kind of bad, get them Bartesian at the push of a button. Make bar quality cosmopolitans, martinis, manhattans and more. All in just 30 seconds. All for $100 off.
Amazing toys aren't just for kids. Get $100 off a cocktail maker when you spend $400 through Cyber Monday. Visit bartesian.com slash cocktail.
That's B-A-R-T-E-S-I-A-N.com slash cocktail. Just a few years ago, only 3% of domestic violence shelters accepted pets, meaning many abuse survivors had to choose between staying in a difficult situation for their pet or leaving their pet behind. One in three women and one in four men experienced domestic abuse in their lifetime, and nearly half of survivors delay leaving because they can't bring their pets with them. Purina believes in the healing power of pets, particularly for survivors of abuse. They believe pets and people are better together, which is one of the many reasons they started the Purple Leash Project. Through the Purple Leash Project, Purina is helping break down one of the many barriers abuse survivors face, the lack of pet friendly domestic violence shelters. Purina has helped increase the amount of pet friendly shelters across the country from 3% to nearly 20% through the Purple Leash Project. With more pet friendly domestic violence shelters, survivors and their pets can escape and heal together.
Visit purina.com slash purple to get involved. Buying a home can be overwhelming these days. From start to finish, Navy Federal Credit Union's new Home Buying Center has everything you need to get to closing with confidence, like verified pre-approval.
A pre-approval shows sellers you're a serious buyer, potentially giving you a competitive advantage when making an offer. Realty Plus connects you with an agent for continued support every step of the way. Lock and Shop lets you lock in your interest rate for up to 60 days while you shop.
No refi rate drop gives you peace of mind to buy now, knowing that if interest rates fall, you could decrease your rate without having to refinance for a small $250 fee. If you're overwhelmed by shopping for a new home, Navy Federal's new Home Buying Center has solutions for every step of the process. Learn more at navyfederal.org. Navy Federal Credit Union. Our members are the mission. Navy Federal is insured by NCUA Equal Housing Lender, membership required. Terms and conditions apply, loans subject to approval.
Call 1-888-842-6328 for details about credit costs. Here's to the holidays, to the smell of grandma's fresh-baked casseroles, to bundling up by the fire with family and football. The Chinette brand wants you to savor all the joys of Turkey Day while skipping the hassle of cleanup with their Chinette Classic Collection.
And since Chinette Classic plates and bowls are compostable, you're not only keeping the sink clean, you're helping leave less of a mess behind for future generations. So here's to being together. Here's to us, all of us.
Find a local retailer at MyChinette.com. Hey guys, it's Lance Bass from Frosted Tips. AJ McLean and I recently hit the Vegas Speedway to test drive the Hyundai IONIQ 5N before the iHeartRadio Music Festival. We have an awesome episode recapping our experience out now.
Take a listen and thanks to Hyundai for making this possible. We got to do a timed race between the two of us. I won, although I did hit more cones. It's okay. Wait, that doesn't disqualify you? I think it disqualifies you. You know what, it's like splitting hairs here.
Let's just not be that. I think I deserve another tenth of a second. You did hit a cone though. Oh my practice run. Yes. So then we got to go follow a lead car on the main track. We got the car up to 115 miles per hour, which is the fastest I've ever gotten in my life. Weak.
Yeah, weak sauce. I do that. But I did hit, there's a very special button in the car. It's a little special red button that the second you press that button, you are literally like accelerating full torque, full speed, full horsepower. It's 641 horsepower.
Yes, like instantly in like 10 seconds. This episode is presented by Hyundai. And we return to our American stories and with the late Dr. Lester Tenney story. Tenney is the author of My Hitch in Hell. When we last left off, Dr. Tenney was recounting his experiences to an audience at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans about the Bataan Death March as a POW in the Japanese occupied Philippines.
Let's return to the story. The ships were called hell ships because the Japanese refused to put markings on the ships. No POW markings, no Red Cross markings, just plain ships. And when the American submarines saw these ships, they sunk them. 26 ships were sunk by Americans. 10,000 Americans died because the Japanese refused to put markings on the ships. I went into the first ship that I went into with 500 of us in the whole of a ship. 32 days later, we arrived in Japan. But for those 32 days, when a man died in the whole of that ship, we held a lottery to see who was going to get his water or his rice. There's no picture that could describe that, believe me. None.
We finally arrived and now I'm telling you about my arrival. 86 Japanese companies. Mitsui, Nippon Steel, Kawasaki, Mitsubushi. These are big companies. They bought POWs from Japan and they put them to work.
I was bought by Mitsui. 500 of us became coal miners. I shoveled coal 12 hours a day, every day for three years. Oh yes, those were the days all right. The first day we went down in the coal mine. Now these are a bunch of Americans who had never been in a coal mine in their life. And now we're going down there and we are weak.
We hadn't eaten anything now in months. So this first day down there, there was 12 Americans and two Japanese in my little group. You remember, I learned to speak Japanese. I learned to speak Japanese after 10 easy beatings.
Not 10 easy lessons, 10 easy beatings. So now we're down there, three Americans were moving this big rock. I mean they were, they were struggling moving this rock. And the two Japanese are laughing, laughing. And I looked at them and I said, Nandesca, what are you laughing about?
And they said, three Americans, they're so big, but they're so weak. I said, yes, I bet two Japanese could have done it. And he looks at me and he says, no.
I said, no. He said, yes. And so he grabbed a hold of that rock and he started to move that rock.
I swear he herniated himself, but he moved the rock in place. And he stood up and I said to my friends, let's give him a round of applause. And we applauded him. The next two hours, the two Japanese built the wall. All we did is applaud them. We feel their muscles.
Oh my, oh, you're so strong. And they built the wall. So we did have some fun kind of things like that. If you got out of work, you got out of work because you were sick or injured. If you were sick, you got half rations. If you were hurt in the camp, you got half rations.
If you were hurt in the coal mine, you got full rations. So when a man broke an arm or broke a leg or broke a hand, it was always in the coal mine. Yes, we broke our own hand. We broke our own foot. We would break a bone just to get out of work for two or three days. And if you couldn't break it yourself, you hired a breaker.
Yeah. With 1,700 men there, you could always find a man to do something. And we did have a few that were breakers.
They would know how to break an arm or leg or hand so that you didn't have to lose it. So you had to pay for it. What did you pay? Oh, you paid so many rations of rice. Or you paid cigarettes. The Japanese gave us a pack of 10 cigarettes once every three, four, five, six, seven weeks.
You never knew when. But if you wanted an arm broken or a leg broken, depending on what you wanted, the price would go up based on how serious it was. A hand was only five packs of cigarettes. A foot was seven packs of cigarettes.
Now an arm was ten packs of cigarettes. Very, very expensive. Now, how are you going to get rice? Well, let me tell you. With 1,700 men in our prison camp, you know that there's always going to be one or two that can't eat their food today. What do you do with the food? The food.
What up? Where did I get the word food? The rice. You can't save rice because rice gets sour. And if it gets sour, you better not eat it.
You're going to get sick. So what do you do with your rice when you can't eat it? You sell it. What do you sell it for? Cigarettes.
How many cigarettes can you get for a ration of rice? Now, folks, I'm a retired professor of finance from Arizona State University. And I want you to know that I learned everything that was about finance in prison camp. Yeah.
Maybe you heard of this before. You buy low and you sell high. And that's the whole philosophy of what we did in prison camp with our cigarettes. If I had a package of cigarettes, there's no way I was going to smoke it. That's cigarettes were worth food. So I would hold the cigarettes back. Today, cigarettes are issued. I would have to pay one pack of cigarettes for a bowl of rice. But if I could wait two weeks, three weeks, three and a half weeks, when the cigarettes were being smoked, supply and demand, then I could buy a ration of rice for two cigarettes. Sometimes even one cigarette.
Not a pack, but one cigarette. And so if you're smart, you buy low and you sell high. So you think I'm joking? No, no. I'm very serious.
I play the game. But what if the guy goes bankrupt? What if he owes too much and he can't pay off?
Well, that was a very common process. See, he owes me a ration of rice on Thursday. Comes Thursday, I want my ration of rice. And he says, I can't give it to you. I owed it to somebody else. And I say, come on the back of the barn. You're not going to do that to me.
That's my food. So in order to protect that man against people like myself that would want to punch him, we developed a bankruptcy court. Yeah, I'm not telling you stories.
I'm telling you the truth. We developed a bankruptcy court. The difference between our bankruptcy court and what you know about bankruptcy was this. The man had to pay every ration of rice. But what we did was we had to protect the man from being beaten.
That's number one. Number two, we had to make sure the man was able to eat at least two rations of rice a day so that he was able to go to work. If he didn't go to work, the Japanese were going to kill him. So we developed a bankruptcy court, brought him in, found out how many rations he owed, and then would set up a program for him to pay one ration a day until the whole thing was paid off. So we had a lot of systems in prison camp. And you've been listening to Dr. Lester Tenney, and he's the author of My Hitch in Hell, the Bataan Death March. And what a story he's telling to have lived through this. And my goodness, the Japanese not marking those ships.
There were no POW markings, no Red Cross markings. And so many, well, so many Americans needlessly died at the hands of Americans or allies. And my goodness, then all about the intricacies of life in that prison. And life in many prisons, by the way, work on the same basis of scarcity, supply and demand, black markets.
And when we come back, more of the story of Dr. Lester Tenney, the Bataan Death March and its aftermath here on Our American Stories. Black Friday is coming. And for the adults in your life who love the coolest toys, well, there's something for them this year too. Bartesian is the premier craft cocktail maker that automatically makes more than 60 seasonal and classic cocktails, each in under 30 seconds at the push of a button. And right now, Bartesian is having a huge site-wide sale. You can get $100 off any cocktail maker or cocktail maker bundle when you spend $400 or more. So if the cocktail lover in your life has been good this year, or the right kind of bad, get them Bartesian at the push of a button. Make bar quality cosmopolitans, martinis, Manhattans, and more, all in just 30 seconds, all for $100 off.
Amazing toys aren't just for kids. Get $100 off a cocktail maker when you spend $400 through Cyber Monday. Visit bartesian.com slash cocktail.
That's B-A-R-T-E-S-I-A-N.com slash cocktail. Just a few years ago, only 3% of domestic violence shelters accepted pets, meaning many abuse survivors had to choose between staying in a difficult situation for their pet or leaving their pet behind. One in three women and one in four men experience domestic abuse in their lifetime, and nearly half of survivors delay leaving because they can't bring their pets with them. Purina believes in the healing power of pets, particularly for survivors of abuse. They believe pets and people are better together, which is one of the many reasons they started the Purple Leash Project. Through the Purple Leash Project, Purina is helping break down one of the many barriers abuse survivors face, the lack of pet-friendly domestic violence shelters. Purina has helped increase the amount of pet-friendly shelters across the country from 3% to nearly 20% through the Purple Leash Project. With more pet-friendly domestic violence shelters, survivors and their pets can escape and heal together.
Visit purina.com slash purple to get involved. Buying a home can be overwhelming these days. From start to finish, Navy Federal Credit Union's new Home Buying Center has everything you need to get to closing with confidence, like verified pre-approval.
A pre-approval shows sellers you're a serious buyer, potentially giving you a competitive advantage when making an offer. Realty Plus connects you with an agent for continued support every step of the way. Lock and Shop lets you lock in your interest rate for up to 60 days while you shop.
No refi rate drop gives you peace of mind to buy now, knowing that if interest rates fall, you could decrease your rate without having to refinance for a small $250 fee. If you're overwhelmed by shopping for a new home, Navy Federal's new Home Buying Center has solutions for every step of the process. Learn more at navyfederal.org. Navy Federal Credit Union. Our members are the mission. Navy Federal is insured by NCUA Equal Housing Lender. Membership required. Terms and conditions apply. Loans subject to approval.
Call 1-888-842-6328 for details about credit costs. Here's to the holidays, to the smell of grandma's fresh baked casseroles, to bundling up by the fire with family and football. The Chinette brand wants you to savor all the joys of Turkey Day while skipping the hassle of cleanup with their Chinette Classic Collection.
And since Chinette Classic plates and bowls are compostable, you're not only keeping the sink clean, you're helping leave less of a mess behind for future generations. So here's to being together. Here's to us. All of us.
Find a local retailer at mychinette.com. Hey guys, it's Lance Bass from Frosted Tips. AJ McLean and I recently hit the Vegas Speedway to test drive the Hyundai IONIQ 5N before the iHeartRadio Music Festival. We have an awesome episode recapping our experience out now.
Take a listen and thanks to Hyundai for making this possible. We got to do a timed race between the two of us. I won, although I did hit more cones. It's okay. Wait, that doesn't disqualify you? You know what, it's like splitting hairs here.
Let's just not do that. I think I deserve another tenth of a second. You did hit a cone though. Oh my practice run. So then we got to go follow a lead car on the main track. We got the car up to 115 miles per hour, which is the fastest I've ever gotten in my life. Weak.
Yeah, weak sauce. I do that. But I did hit, there's a very special button in the car. It's a little special red button that the second you press that button, you are literally like accelerating full torque, full speed, full horsepower. It's 641 horsepower. Yes.
Like instantly in like 10 seconds. This episode is presented by Hyundai. And we return to our American stories and the final portion of the late Dr. Lester Tenney's story. Dr. Tenney is the author of My Hitch in Hell, The Baton Death March. Let's return to the story that he told at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans, one of the finest places to take your family to visit to learn more about World War II than anywhere else in America.
Let's return to Dr. Tenney's story. Of the Americans captured by the Germans, 1.5% died as a prisoner of war. Of the Americans captured by the Japanese, 40%, four zero died as a prisoner of war.
We always said, all the prisoners said the same thing. The war is over when four things happen. Number one, we don't have to go to work. Number two, we got all the rice we want. Number three, we ever get a Red Cross box, a box from home. Number four, we don't have to salute the Japanese guard every time we see him.
When those four things happen, the war is over. My prison camp, number 17, was exactly across the bay from Nagasaki, 30 miles across the water. We heard the explosion. We saw the cloud rise.
It was right like it was in our backyard. So we knew, we didn't know what it was, but we saw it. I want you to know that a document was issued by General Tojo in November of 1944 that said, in essence, I won't read the whole document to you, but it said that if Americans land on Japanese soil, you are to dispose of all the prisoners. And then it says the method, whether they are destroyed individually or in groups. No matter how they were destroyed by bombing, poisonous gas, smoke, drowning, or decapitation, it's your responsibility to try to leave no traces of the body.
Now that's what we had. If the war did not end then, every prisoner in Japan would have been executed. 120,000 prisoners were in Japan. 120,000 would have been killed instantly if that war did not end and if we had to land on Japanese soil.
So it's important that we understand that anyhow. On August 15th, we went to work in the coal mine. One hour later, we were brought back. Hey, what's going on here?
This has never happened before. At 10 o'clock in the morning, we were all put in the mess hall and every man was given a red cross box. The red cross sent the boxes to the prisoners, which we never got. The Japanese got them. We did not get letters. We got very little mail. I got one Christmas card from my family, which caused me to get one of the most severe beatings I've ever had by the Japanese. I got a Christmas card with a lot of names and numbers on it and the Japanese asked me, what do these numbers mean? You're a spy.
I didn't know. What's 212? 143?
618? How do you know what they're talking about? It took me almost one hour of beatings to realize that my family got all the people in the apartment building to sign their name and what apartment they were in. And finally, I was able to convince the Japanese of what it was and they accepted it. Let me tell you, this red cross box, there was a pack of cigarettes in there, a candy bar, Hershey bar, can of sardines, some food, other kinds of food, little good things that you wanted.
That was what was in the box. We got that 10 o'clock that morning. Then we went in for our meal, our ration of rice and the POWs behind the rice bowls would say to us, would you guys like a little more rice?
Are you kidding? Pile it on, buddy. Man, they piled it on. All we wanted to eat. No work. Red cross box. All we wanted to eat.
Rice. Something's happening. The hair just turned on like this.
We just couldn't believe it. Finally, my buddy said to me, hey, Tenney, go out and say hello to the guard without bowing. See what happens. Sure, you're right. Sure, he told me to go out. But you do have to understand, after having so many beatings, and by the way, in the coal mine, we were beaten by the Japanese civilians if we didn't bow low enough, didn't work hard enough, or didn't work fast enough and they would beat us and they beat us with shovels, pickaxes, and hammers. That's how we were beaten down in the mine.
So another beating would not be too bad. And so I went outside and I said to the Japanese guard who was standing there with his rifle, and I walked up to him and I said, Konnichiwa Tomodachi. And he looked at me, 10 seconds, 15 seconds. Finally, he stood at attention and he bowed to me. And I knew the war was over.
He bowed to me. You know, I got out, I was in the hospital for about a year, and I got out of the hospital and I wrote a letter to the State Department. How do I go about suing the Japanese companies for my wages and what they owe me? The copy of the letter I have here is dated September 20th, 1946. The response that I got from them, from the State Department, was nothing more than a document that said that the State Department is working to do something for us.
That was in 1946. I haven't seen anything either. The first 50 years we did not talk about anything. We didn't say anything. No one, no one knew that I was a prisoner of war. No one. My wife knew.
I never told anybody else. You see, most people think being a prisoner of war, you wave a white flag and you say, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, I surrender, I surrender. Well, that's not the way it was.
Not with us. But we were not proud of being a prisoner. For 50 years, we were not proud of being a prisoner. Maybe the Japanese were right. We should have fought to the end.
Maybe the Japanese were right. We're cowards. And so that's how we felt for 50 years. 50 years we felt that way. It's just been, the good Lord has been so kind to me that I'm able to share the real story of what happened on Bataan and Karakor. That's our story, folks. That's what we did. That's how we put up with it.
I have a poem that I would like to read you because it's hard. It tells my whole story. I'm looking at my watch again. We started at six.
It's now 715. Let me share this with you, if I may. I think it tells my story anyhow. As I sit here thinking of the men I left behind, I have to put in writing what is running through my mind. At last, I want the world to know. So gather closely, friends, while I tell. You see, when I die, I know I'll go to heaven because I've done my hitch in hell.
But there is just one condition for my telling of this story. You see, I am looking for no sympathy and I am seeking no glory. Though I've marched those many miles and survived so many camps, why I've had malaria and dysentery, fevers, aches, and cramps. I've shoveled a million tons of coal. I've cleaned a thousand miles of ground. My meaner place this side of hell is just waiting to be found.
The number of Japanese soldiers I've saluted is very hard to tell. But I won't have to salute in heaven because I've done my hitch in hell. When finally taps are sounded and I lay aside life's cares, I'll do my last salute as I climb up those shining stairs. The angels will all greet me and harps will start to play.
Why, I'll draw a million rations and eat them all in one day. It's then I'll hear Saint Peter tell me with a yell, hey, front and center, my dear soldier, you've done your hitch in hell. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Front and center, my dear soldier, indeed, the late Lester Tenney telling his story, his raw story, his real story.
We were not proud of being a prisoner, he said. And folks, whatever you do, visit the National World War II Museum in New Orleans. Bring the family. It's a beautiful town. I got married in that town. Five times I've been to that museum. That's a pilgrimage for me and my family.
It should be for you and your family too. The story of Dr. Lester Tenney here on Our American Stories. You can't resist. You wake up, put on your Ray-Ban Meta glasses.
You're living all in. You realize you need coffee. So you say, hey, Meta, how do I make a latte? After Meta AI gets you caffeinated, you're ready for some beats.
You had to meet some friends, but can't remember the place. Hey Meta, to harness the power of Meta AI. Shop now at meta.com slash smart glasses. Hate has been winning for too long. It's at an all time high and too many people are facing too much hate all over this country. To turn the tide, we have to stand together. As a united team, we can change the momentum. It's time to take a time out against hate. Visit standuptowallhate.org to help.
Join us in calling for a hashtag timeout against hate by following at what's up with hate or posting the blue square emoji. Mrs. Meyer's clean day presents goodness from the garden. Imagine your home blooming with floral scents, no dirt or grime in sight. That's the power of Mrs. Meyer's clean day. With uplifting scents and down to earth values, Mrs. Meyer's collection of household products is inspired by the garden. Each scent made with essential oils and other thoughtfully chosen ingredients that don't just smell delightful.
They're tough on messes too. When it comes to cleaning, it's more fun if it smells like the garden. So visit mrsmyers.com now.
This is Tonya Rad from scrubbing in with Becca Tilly and Tonya Rad. This is what you do when you've just found that statement handbag on eBay and you want to build an entire wardrobe around it. You start selling to keep buying. Yep, on eBay. Over that all black everything phase, list it and buy all the color. Feeling more vintage than ever?
It's out with the new and in with the pre-loved. Next thing you know you've refreshed your wardrobe basically without spending a dime. Yeah, eBay. The place to buy and sell new pre-loved vintage and rare fashion. eBay, things people love.
Whisper: medium.en / 2024-11-06 04:58:54 / 2024-11-06 05:19:03 / 20