Story

First Shots in the Pacific War

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Authors: Keith Fitzgerald

Historic Era: Era 8: The Great Depression and World War II (1929-1945)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

Winter 2023 | Volume 68, Issue 1

Silent witness to war, an ancient coconut palm survived the attack with numerous bullet holes.
A silent witness to war, this old coconut palm survived the attack, with a few bullet holes as mementos. “When this tree is gone, there will be no more relics of the invasion,” a local guide told the author. Malaysian authorities have little appetite for preservation or commemoration of the war.

Editor's Note: Photographs are by the author, unless otherwise credited.

Zafrani brings bullets.

His cousin, sitting at the desk of the Tourist Information Center, had called him up, told him to hurry over. There’s an American guy here who wants to see where World War II in Asia really began.

I wait for Zafrani in this cheery red-and-yellow building with the typical bumbung pajang roof across from a small circular park that welcomes one and all to Kota Bharu, “The Islamic City,” from the bleak Thai border city of Sungai Kolok.

Before I crossed over, I spent an hour in that town waiting for a bus or tuk-tuk to take me to Harmony Bridge, which spans the river running between Thailand and Malaysia. Walked around in the neighborhood near the station, killing time, half anticipating a shattering blast, shrapnel, blood, and pieces of people strewn on the street. But the Muslim separatists are quiet today.

I’m headed to see British pillboxes and the beach where the Japanese landed, the place where the march through Malaya and into Singapore started.

In this part of Thailand — the three southernmost provinces of Pattani, Narathiwat, and Yala — more than 7,000 people have been murdered since 2004. The killers want a separate state. Sometimes, they shoot or slice up Buddhist schoolteachers because they're Buddhist. 

I’m headed to see British pillboxes and the beach where the Japanese landed, the place where the march through Malaya and into Singapore started.

Zafrani Araffin arrives in about 30 minutes. He’s a short, chunky fellow in his 40s with deep tan skin and a bearing as sweet as I've ever encountered. I ask him what he does for work. “My job is at a bank.” I can tell he doesn't want to talk about it. His passion is the history that almost no one else in Kota Bharu or Kelantan state or Malaysia or anywhere else on the globe knows or cares about.

bullets
Japanese Arisaka rifle cartridges found on the beach at Kota Bharu

“The Second World War in Asia started here,”  Zafrani explains. “The Japanese attacked British forces at Kuala Pak Amat beach about 80 minutes before they bombed Pearl Harbor. Look at these bullets! I found them on the beach.” Zafrani glows with pride.

He has come with his older brother, Amran. They're Muslim. They could not be friendlier. I could not be luckier. Zafrani promises to take me on a tour tomorrow. I have my Kota Bharu road map on the desk. He hands me two 6.5 x 50-millimeter