Lim Bo Seng
Lim Bo Seng | |||
---|---|---|---|
Native name | 林謀盛 | ||
Other name(s) | Tan Choon Lim | ||
Born | Meilin Town, Nan'an County, Fujian Province, Qing Empire | 27 April 1909||
Died | 29 June 1944 Batu Gajah Prison, Perak, Malaya[1] | (aged 35)||
Buried | Lim Bo Seng Memorial Tomb, MacRitchie Reservoir Park 1°20′31.76″N 103°49′50.6″E / 1.3421556°N 103.830722°ECoordinates: 1°20′31.76″N 103°49′50.6″E / 1.3421556°N 103.830722°E | ||
Allegiance | Special Operations Executive Allies | ||
Service/ | Force 136 | ||
Years of service | 1942–1944 | ||
Rank | Major-General (posthumously awarded by the Republic of China) | ||
Battles/wars | Operation Gustavus | ||
Memorials | Lim Bo Seng Memorial, Esplanade Park | ||
Spouse(s) | Gan Choo Neo (m. 1930–1944) | ||
Children |
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Relations | Lim Loh (father) Lim Teck Yin (grandson) | ||
Chinese name | |||
Traditional Chinese | 林謀盛 | ||
Simplified Chinese | 林谋盛 | ||
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Lim Bo Seng (27 April 1909 – 29 June 1944) was a Chinese resistance fighter based in Singapore and Malaya during World War II. Before the outbreak of World War II, he was a prominent businessman among the Chinese community in Singapore. When the Second Sino-Japanese War broke, he participated in anti-Japanese activities in Malaya and Singapore. During Japanese occupation of Malaya and Singapore, he was tasked to establish Force 136, a guerrilla task force backed by Special Operations Executive (SOE). However, he was captured by Japanese forces and died while interned. He is remembered as a war hero in Singapore and Malaysia.
Family background and early life[]
Lim was born in Meilin Town, Nan'an County, Fujian Province in the final years of the Qing dynasty of China. His father, Lim Loh (林路; Lín Lù), was a building constructor who had six wives, nineteen sons (the first ten of whom were adopted) and nine daughters. Lim was the eleventh son. In 1925, Lim came to Singapore at the age of 16 and completed his secondary education in Raffles Institution. After graduating, he went on to study business at the University of Hong Kong.
In 1930, Lim married Gan Choo Neo (顏珠娘; Yán Zhū-niáng), a Nyonya woman from the Lim clan association in Singapore. They had eight children; one died in infancy. Initially a Taoist, Lim converted to Christianity after marrying Gan.[2]
As a businessman[]
Lim inherited his father's business in 1929 after his father died. He started running two businesses in brick manufacturing and biscuit production before venturing into the construction industry with his brothers. Apart from running his businesses, Lim was also very active in the Chinese community in Singapore. He was nominated for and held several key positions in the community, including Chairman of the Singapore Building Industry Association, Board Member of the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and Executive Member and Education Director of the Singapore Hokkien Association.
Anti-Japanese activism[]
When the Second Sino-Japanese War broke out in 1937, Lim and other Chinese in Singapore participated in anti-Japanese activities, such as the boycotting of Japanese goods and fund-raising to support the war effort in China.
Towards the end of 1937, hundreds of overseas Chinese working in Japanese-owned industries in Malaya went on strike. At the time, the Japanese government owned an iron mine in Bukit Besi near Dungun, Terengganu where about 3,000 workers were employed. The iron ore was shipped to Japan and used as raw material to manufacture weapons. Lim believed that if the workers in the Dungun mine went on strike, the Japanese would suffer a huge loss, so he planned to make the workers go on strike. Around February 1938, Lim travelled to Dungun with (莊惠泉; Zhuāng Huìquán) of the Anxi clan association to carry out their plan. Zhuang went to the mine to persuade the workers to go on strike while Lim contacted the local police and gained their support. By early March, Lim and Zhuang achieved success as many workers left the mine and followed them to Singapore. On 11 March 1938, Lim and the Singaporean Chinese community held a welcoming ceremony for the workers, who later resettled and found employment in Singapore.
In December 1941, Lim was put in charge of organising a group of volunteers (part of the Straits Settlements Volunteer Force) to resist the Japanese, who were advancing towards Southeast Asia. The volunteers put up a fierce fight against the Japanese during the Battle of Singapore in February 1942.
Life in Force 136[]
On 11 February 1942, Lim left Singapore and travelled to Sumatra with other Chinese community leaders and made his way to India later. He recruited and trained hundreds of secret agents through intensive military intelligence missions from China and India. He set up the Sino-British guerrilla task force Force 136 in 1942 with Captain John Davis of the Special Operations Executive (SOE).
Operation Gustavus[]
Operation Gustavus was aimed at establishing an espionage network in Malaya and Singapore to gather intelligence about Japanese activities, and thereby aid the British in Operation Zipper – the code name for their plan to take back Singapore from the Japanese.
On 24 May 1943, the first group of Force 136 agents, codenamed Gustavus I and led by John Davis,[3] arrived in Perak on board the Dutch submarine O 24. The O 24 would rendezvous with Gustavus I again in September and November 1943 to transfer supplies and personnel from Gustavus IV and V respectively.[4] Its sister ship, the O 23, under Captain , transported Gustavus II and Gustavus III to Malaya on 25 June and 4 August 1943 respectively.[5] Lim arrived in Malaya on 2 November 1943 as part of Gustavus V.[4] He travelled under the alias "Tan Choon Lim" (陳春林; Chén Chūnlín) to avoid identification and claimed to be a businessman when he passed through checkpoints.
In Perak, Davis and Lim re-established contact with Major Freddie Chapman, who was part of a British unit that stayed behind after the Malayan Campaign and had been carrying out small-scale attacks against the Japanese in Malaya. They also met guerrilla fighters of the Malayan People's Anti-Japanese Army (MPAJA), including the Malayan communists Chin Peng and Lai Teck. They reached an agreement that the resistance group would be placed under British command in exchange for weapons, supplies and training.[6] One of the Chinese provision shops in Ipoh, Jian Yik Jan (建益棧; Jiàn Yì Zhàn), was used as an Allied espionage base. Communication between the agents was done through smuggling messages in empty toothpaste tubes, salted fish and diaries.
Operation Gustavus failed before the agents managed to achieve any results. A communist guerrilla who was captured by the Japanese in January 1944 revealed the existence of the Allied spy network operating on Pangkor Island. In response, the Japanese launched a full-scale counter-espionage operation on the island. By late March 1944, more than 200 soldiers were on the island. On 24 March, the Kempeitai arrested a fisherman, Chua Koon Eng (蔡群英; Cài Qúnyīng), at Teluk Murrek on the Perak coast. Chua was working on Pangkor Island when Li Han-kwong (李汉光; Lǐ Hànguāng) of Force 136 approached him and requested to use his boat for their communications. Chua confessed and implicated Li in the spy ring. The Japanese laid a trap for Li (who had already escaped Pangkor by then) and, using Chua as bait, captured him shortly after. Under duress, Li confirmed Chua's story but managed to avoid adding anything the Japanese already knew. The Kempeitai took Li to Ipoh in the hope that he would reveal more information. However, Li managed to escape on 26 March 1944 into the jungle. The Kempeitai went on an all-out search for Li and other Force 136 members, eventually leading to Lim's capture. The entire spy network was destroyed by 31 March 1944 and was not reestablished until February 1945.[7][8]
Capture and death[]
Lim was captured by the Kempeitai under Major (大西覺) at a roadblock in Gopeng, Perak around March or April 1944, and taken to the Kempeitai headquarters for interrogation. He refused to provide the Japanese with any information about Force 136 despite being subjected to torture, and protested against the ill treatment of his comrades in prison. He fell ill with dysentery and was bedridden by the end of May 1944. Lim died in the early hours of 29 June 1944 at the age of 35,[9] and was buried behind the Batu Gajah prison compound in an unmarked spot. After the Japanese surrender, Gan Choo Neo was informed of her husband's death by the priest of St. Andrew's School. She went to Batu Gajah with her eldest son to bring her husband's remains home.
Lim's remains arrived at the Tanjong Pagar railway station in Singapore on 7 December 1945. Upon arrival, the hearse was sent off by a large procession of British officers and prominent businessmen from the station to Hock Ann Biscuit Factory in Upper Serangoon Road via Armenian Street. On the same day, a memorial service for Lim was held at the Tong Teh Library of the Kuomintang Association in Singapore.[10]
A funeral service was held on 13 January 1946 at City Hall. Lim's remains was transported in a coffin to a hill in MacRitchie Reservoir (coordinates: 1°20'31.76"N 103°49'50.60"E) for burial with full military honours. Lim was posthumously awarded the rank of Major-General by the Nationalist government of the Republic of China.[11]
The Lim Bo Seng Memorial was unveiled at the Esplanade on 29 June 1954, the 10th anniversary of his death.[12] There are also places named after Lim, such as Bo Seng Avenue in Thomson, Singapore, and Jalan Lim Bo Seng in Ipoh, Malaysia.
Children and descendants[]
Lim and Gan Choo Neo had four sons and four daughters, one of whom died in infancy. Gan died from cancer on 25 September 1979 at the age of 71.[13] Their sons were , Lim Chin Geok, Lim Whye Geok and Lim Lam Geok. Their daughters were Leow Oon Geok (née Lim), Lim Leng Geok (died in infancy), Yeo Ai Geok (née Lim) and Ooi Siew Geok (née Lim).[13][14][15][16]
Among Lim's children, his eldest son Lim Leong Geok (1932–2004) was an Executive Director of the SMRT Corporation and a key figure in the development of the Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) and Singapore's public transport system. He was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Contribution award by the Land Transport Authority on 31 March 2010.[17][15]
One of Lim's grandsons, Lim Teck Yin, is a former Brigadier-General in the Singapore Armed Forces and the current Chief Executive Officer of Sport Singapore.[16][18]
In academia and popular culture[]
Around the 1990s, Asiapac Books published a comic book (ISBN 981-229-067-2) based on Lim's life. It was written by Clara Show and illustrated by Chu Yi Min.[19]
In 1997, Singapore's Chinese-language television channel, TCS Channel 8, aired a television series, The Price of Peace, about the Japanese occupation of Singapore. Singaporean actor Rayson Tan portrayed Lim as a semi-fictional protagonist in the drama. In 1999, the English-language channel TCS Channel Five aired an English-dubbed version of The Price of Peace.
Bibliography[]
- ^ "Lim Bo Seng". Singapore Heroes. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- ^ "The life of Lim Bo Seng". Singapore Press Holdings. Archived from the original on 6 February 2016. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- ^ "John Davis: SOE leader in Japanese-occupied Malaya". The Sunday Times. 31 October 2006. Retrieved 6 January 2011.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Dutch Submarines: The submarine O 24, Dutch Submarines, retrieved 6 January 2011
- ^ Dutch Submarines: The submarine O 23, Dutch Submarines, retrieved 6 January 2011
- ^ Cheah, Boon Kheng (2003). Red Star over Malaya. National University of Singapore Press. ISBN 9971695081.
- ^ Bose, Romen (2012). Singapore at War: Secrets from the Fall, Liberation and the Aftermath of WW2. Marshall Cavendish. p. 166.
- ^ "Activist, Leader, Patriot" (PDF). Ashok Palaniappan. 17 June 2009. Retrieved 6 January 2011.
- ^ "LIM BO SENG - MY HERO, MY FRIEND". Singapore Press Holdings. Archived from the original on 17 January 2015. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- ^ "Col. Lim's remains in Singapore". The Straits Times. Singapore. 8 December 1945. p. 3.
- ^ "Lim Bo Seng". National Library Board. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- ^ Ng, Jenny. "1944 - Lim Bo Seng". Mindef. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Obituary: Mrs Lim Bo Seng". New Nation. 25 September 1979. p. 16.
- ^ "Music for This Family". The Singapore Free Press. 6 November 1953. p. 3.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Jaafar, Afiq (29 June 2013). "Interview with Lim Bo Seng's Children". irememberSG. Singapore Memory Project. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Commemoration Ceremony for Lim Bo Seng and Force 136". Singapore History Consultants. 12 August 2014. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
- ^ "CONNECT (Land Transport Authority's newsletter)" (PDF). Land Transport Authority. May 2010. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
- ^ "Our Senior Management". Sport Singapore. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
- ^ Clara Show (1998). LIM BO SENG: Singapore's Best-known War Hero. ISBN 981-229-067-2. Archived from the original on 28 April 2007.
Further reading[]
- Chapman, F. Spencer (1949), The Jungle Is Neutral, Chatto and Windus. Subsequently, published in 1977 by Triad/Mayflower Books and in 2003 by The Lyons Press.
- Poh, Guan Huat (1972), Lim Bo Seng: Nanyang Chinese Patriot, Honours thesis submitted to the History Department, University of Singapore.
- Tan, Chong Tee (2001), Force 136: Story of a World War II Resistance Fighter (second edition), by Asiapac Books.
- Victoria School (2003), "Lim Bo Seng Memorial".
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to |
- 1909 births
- 1944 deaths
- Alumni of St. John's Hall, University of Hong Kong
- People of British Singapore
- Converts to Christianity
- Chinese emigrants to Singapore
- Singaporean people of Hokkien descent
- Singaporean people of World War II
- Raffles Institution alumni
- World War II resistance members
- Military history of Malaya during World War II