Foreigners who were interned when Australia went to war led remarkable lives, with many of their stories relatively untold.
Flinders University historian Professor Peter Monteath’s new book, Captured Lives: Australia’s Wartime Internment Camps (National Library of Australia Publishing, $39.99) follows the recent publication of Savage Worlds: German Encounters Abroad 1798-1914, co-edited with Flinders historian Associate Professor Matthew Fitzpatrick (Manchester University Press).
Following from earlier books entitled Interned: Torrens Island 1914-15 and POW: Australian Prisoners of War in Hitler’s Reich, the new book revisits South Australian internment camp sites at Sandy Creek, Loveday and Torrens Island.
Captured Lives covers more than 30 of the main internment and prisoner of war (POW) camps spread across Australia during the two world wars. Individual stories are told of a colourful selection of civilian internees, POWs and the officials who managed the camps.
Professor Monteath, a prolific author, says the new book “builds on a 2014-15 collaboration with the SA Migration Museum which featured a book and exhibition on the Torrens Islands Internment Camp – or German Concentration Camp as it was known at the time”.
“This time the National Library of Australia sought a collaboration to do a book covering internment and POW camps in all parts of Australia and in both wars.
“It’s a topic which has great resonance in South Australia with its German roots, but with a significant Italian population also.
“In the Second World War there was a large camp at Loveday, and many South Australians today have forebears who spent time behind barbed wire there.
“In the Second World War, in particular, the diversity of the populations in the camp – civilian internees and POWs – is most striking.”
The insights in Captured Lives: Australia’s Wartime Internment Camps give a captivating, visual look behind the barbed wire fences that contained people deemed to be a threat to Australian security.
Civilians from ‘enemy’ nations, even if born in Australia, were subjects of suspicion and locked up in internment camps. Many were long-term residents of Australia, had contributed to the local economy and brought new skills and know-how to the nation.
For them, being interned was very difficult and bewildering. Among them were: