U.S. World War Two veterans roll up sleeves for vaccination in Los
Angeles
Send a link to a friend
[January 09, 2021]
By Omar Younis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Harry Corre, a U.S.
Army veteran of World War Two who survived the Bataan Death March and a
Japanese slave labor camp, rolled up his sleeve on Friday for his second
coronavirus vaccine shot at a VA hospital in Los Angeles to help promote
immunizations.
Corre, 97, was one of three World War Two vets, all former prisoners of
war, receiving vaccinations at the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System outside a newly established mobile
isolation unit for COVID-19 patients.
As a volunteer at the hospital, and someone considered at higher risk
because of his advanced age, Corre said he wanted to make sure he and
his fellow vets were well protected against the potentially fatal
respiratory virus.
"My concern is for all veterans," he told Reuters. "I want to be sure
that they get their shot. I got my first shot, and it was fine, no
problems. And I'm going to get my second shot today.
"Come and get your vaccination. It's extremely important," he added. We
all need it and we want to keep everybody else from getting COVID."
Many Americans have expressed hesitancy about taking a vaccine developed
at record speed just 11 months after the pandemic emerged in the United
States.
But Corre had no misgivings as he rolled up his sleeve for a booster
dose of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine in front of media cameras. He has no
doubt faced much more daunting challenges.
Captured by Japanese forces in the Philippines in April 1942, Corre was
among thousands of U.S. and Filipino prisoners of war subjected to a
brutal forced evacuation that became known as the Bataan Death March.
[to top of second column]
|
He escaped after 2-1/2 days to another U.S. stronghold, only to be
recaptured when that outpost fell and Americans surrendered all
remaining forces in the Philippines to the Japanese.
Corre remained a POW for 3-1/2 years, including a year and a half as
a slave laborer in the coal mines in Japan, and weighed just 87
pounds (39.5 kg) when he was liberated in 1946.
Fellow veteran Morris Chester, 95, endured a likewise harrowing
ordeal, captured by German forces in December 1944 during the Battle
of the Bulge and held as a POW for 2-1/2 years.
Along with other American POWs, he was housed inside railroad
boxcars parked next to German factories in a bid to dissuade Allied
forces from bombing the facilities. They were bombed anyway, and
many POWs perished, though Chester survived.
"We'd like to be here for a longer period," he said. "And the
vaccine is certainly a show-stopper."
(Reporting by Omar Younis in Los Angeles; Additional reporting and
writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; editing by Richard Pullin)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |