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Als Ik Mijn Ogen Sluit (2024)

Documentary | 95 minutes
3,20 10 votes

Genre: Documentary

Duration: 95 minuten

Country: Netherlands

Directed by: Pieter van Huystee

IMDb score: 7,8 (37)

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Als Ik Mijn Ogen Sluit plot

What did the women and children in the Japanese camps in the Dutch East Indies experience? What wounds and traumas were left behind and how did they deal with them during their lives? "When I Close My Eyes" is a film about the women and girls who survived the Japanese camps and how they dealt with this later in life. After all, the Japanese camps left behind large scars, and many of those scars have not yet healed or disappeared. The stories of the survivors were no longer heard or recognized in the Netherlands after the war and it is difficult for the survivors to accept that many people know little about this period. This evokes feelings of anger and causes renewed intense pain.

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avatar van mrklm

mrklm

  • 11374 messages
  • 9897 votes

Pieter van Huystee's mother also survived the Japanese camps and both his and her sister regret that they never spoke to their mother about her experiences, even to understand how it affected their own lives. In this documentary he speaks to some of the last survivors, and it is striking that they did not tell their stories mainly because they would not have had it as hard as the concentration camp survivors. Van Huystee first lets the women paint a picture of Indonesia before the occupation, then it seems as if he let everyone talk in the hope that he could add some structure afterwards. And so it consists of short anecdotes and never goes into depth. Plus, a man's perspective would have been welcome.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original

avatar van De filosoof

De filosoof

  • 2450 messages
  • 1665 votes

The justification or reason for this documentary about the women and children in the Japanese camps on Java is that the story has always received little attention: the suffering of the Jews was after all worse because they were systematically destroyed and even within the Indian community it was not discussed because the men immediately said "Yes, but...", with which they indicated that their suffering - men were after all tortured and murdered - was incomparably greater. Nevertheless, the story that has now 'finally' been told of the now very old women who were in the camps is interesting and impressive and that story, illustrated with drawings, is told excellently by the documentary. In the beginning the camps seemed innocent but the Japanese imposed a military discipline that was of course especially difficult for the children to maintain and that therefore instilled great fear in both the women and the children. The Japanese themselves were also disciplined and a Japanese soldier who approached a woman against the rules was shot, but a commander took advantage of the gap that young girls were not covered by the ban… Comfort women are only mentioned implicitly because the women interviewed were not comfort women themselves: they only reported that the Japanese picked out the most attractive women and took them elsewhere; the greatest trauma was the taking away of the older boys. More and more women and children were brought into the camps among whom the scarce space and food had to be divided so that eventually some starved to death. In short, interesting and impressive and yet at the end I also had something of “yes, but” because, as the women themselves tell, they were slowly driven towards the destruction that was supposed to take place in Borneo, but with the atomic bombs on Japan suddenly came salvation because they ended the war unexpectedly quickly. In this way they were spared the absolute horror that the Jews or the men suffered.

dutch flagTranslated from Dutch · View original