To date, the MVG has purchased 2 teak benches, each with a brass dedication plaque to the Malayan Volunteers. These can be found in the FEPOW Plot in the National Memorial Arboretum, in Alrewas. In August 2005, to mark the 60th Anniversary of V-J Day, a granite stone tablet was unveiled in the Arboretum, inscribed with the words, "Commemorating the Malayan Volunteers both Military and Civilian who served in WW2, 1941-1945." This stands on the outline of a Malay Kris landscaped into the NMBVA Plot, by their kind permission.
The MVG took part in other events during the important 60th Anniversary celebrations marking V-J Day in 2005. One of these events took place in Thailand on V-J Day itself, where a group of MVG members attended several V-J Day Commemoration Services on the River Kwai. Wreaths were laid on behalf of the MVG at the main Commonwealth Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, and at the Australian Memorial at Hell Fire Pass. In Chungkai, the smaller of the 2 cemeteries, which lies beside the River Kwai, a particularly poignant moment occurred when the MVG wreath was laid on the Cross of Remembrance jointly by the widow of one Singapore Volunteer, and the daughter of another Volunteer. Later in August, in London, a wreath was laid at the Cenotaph in memory of the Malayan Volunteers during the Burma Star Association's V-J Day Service. On Remembrance Sunday in November, 10 MVG members marched past the Cenotaph and whilst doing so, handed in a commemorative wreath.
In 2006 the MVG sponsored the library books in the Thailand/Burma Railway Centre Museum in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, by kind invitation of its founder and Managing Director, Rod Beattie. The Library Complex in this remarkable and truly informative museum now contains a panel about the Malayan Volunteers, and a teak wall plaque dedicating the library books to the Volunteers. See Photo Gallery.
In 2006-2007 the garden plot at the NMA, in memory of the Malayan Volunteers, was designed, constructed and dedicated. It was the MVG's most ambitious undertaking to date. The plot was planted with hardy Asiatic trees and bamboos, and contains our two teak benches. In order to complete this project, the MVG raised £3,500 to cover the costs of the plot itself, the plants and the detailed landscaping drawings.
Future plans include commissioning a Memorial Stone at Changi Museum in Singapore, where in 1942 the Malayan Volunteers played such a vital role in the defence of their own country, their families, their homes and their livelihoods.
The importance of the Volunteer Movement to the defence of Singapore and Malaya was clearly emphasized by Major-General W.G.S. Dobbie, General Officer Commanding Troops, Malaya in 1938, when he wrote:-
"The close connection between Singapore and its Volunteer Corps, now extending over eighty years, is an association which must be highly prized, especially in view of the important role assigned to the Corps in the Scheme of Defence."