The Sinking of the Arisan Maru
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The Sinking of the Arisan Maru by Malika Brown and Gabriel Corro recounts one of the deadliest and least remembered maritime disasters of World War II: the October 24, 1944, torpedoing of the Japanese "hell ship" Arisan Maru carrying 1,782 American prisoners of war from Manila toward Formosa. Only eight men survived.
Moving from the fall of the Philippines and the Bataan Death March to the concentration camp system and forced labor that spanned Asia, Brown and Corro show how captivity operated as an industrial pipeline: prisoners were stripped of identity, treated as expendable manpower, and transported in cargo holds designed for freight-not human beings. In the suffocating darkness below deck, starvation, disease, and neglect turned the voyage into a slow execution long before the torpedoes struck. |