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Titre: Clip: Keith Lock discusses 'Operation Oblivion'
Date : September 1, 2009
Donateur : Lock, Keith
Sujet : War and War Effort, Work
Province : Ontario
Langue : ENG

Lock, Keith

Keith Lock, is a filmmaker who resides in Toronto. His work includes the documentary The Road Chosen: The Lem Wong Story and a recent feature-length film, The Ache. Keith’s grandmother, Mrs. Quong Lock, was among the first Chinese women to settle in Toronto, Ontario. So rare was the sight of Chinese women in the city that when she arrived in 1909 to join her husband the Toronto Star announced on its front page: ‘Chinese Woman comes to Toronto.’ After her husband passed away in 1933, Mrs. Quong Lock opened her own hand laundry at St. Clair and Lansdowne to support her family. Her son, Tom Lock, joined the Canadian Army during the Second World War. He and other Chinese Canadians were recruited for dangerous duties behind Japanese enemy lines. Tom arrived in Australia in 1944 for special military training, where he met Joan Lim On. They married in 1945, and Joan was permitted to enter Canada during the Exclusion Period (1923-1947) by way of an Act of Privy Council. She, along with another Chinese Australian war bride, Myrtle Wong, arrived in Vancouver aboard the S.S. Monterey in 1946. Joan and Tom settled in Toronto, where Joan was hired as microbiologist at Sick Kids hospital and Tom opened up a pharmacy in Chinatown.

‘And they trained them in sabotage, they trained them in all these weapons, special weapons and radio operating. All the things that secret agents train, hand to hand combat.’

In this audio clip, Keith Lock describes how his father was recruited for a top-secret World War Two operation called ’Operation Oblivion’. Tom Lock was one of several Chinese Canadian soldiers trained in combat and espionage. They were selected because they could easily blend in among the local Chinese population in Asia.