Wandering Hellfire Pass, Kanchanaburi

by wrensrambles@gmail.com

Hellfire Pass is a cutting built for the Thai-Burma railway, by Prisoners of War (POW’s) for the Japanese in 1942-43. In the previous post Visit to River Kwai,  we saw how the area became a popular tourist attraction immortalised through the film Bridge over the River Kwai.

We visited the biggest site of war graves at Kanchanaburi north of Bangkok, Thailand and started to learn more details about the horrific suffering of those involved in building the railway. A feat previously dismissed as impossible by the British.

The Thai – Burma railway was needed to supply the Japanese forces in Burma as the Japanese naval strength had been depleted and the overland route was felt to be preferable than the sea routes.

The railway was constructed by units working on its entire 415 km length, but it was an area called Hellfire Pass that came to symbolise the height of the horror.

The Japanese needed to finish as quickly as possible and decided to use more than 60,000 Allied prisoners mostly British, Australian and Dutch for the work, when it was proving difficult to complete to their timescales, they added a further 200,000 Asian labourers.

Because 13,000 of the prisoners were from Australia the area holds special significance to  Australians and Hellfire pass a deep cutting outside of the town of Kanchanaburi is especially significant. in the early 1940’s it was here that many of the POW’s were housed, the tricky geographical area gave rises to bridges and embankments.

The area fell to the jungle after the war but It was reclaimed in the 1980’s and the Australian Government built the Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum in 1988 and the area is now a popular memorial spot for all nationalities.

It is of particular significance for Australians on Anzac Day, and the Dawn Service and other events draw visitors from across the globe.

You can take a walk along the paths and imagine the horrors of working impossibly long hours in the tropical humid conditions, where tropical disease was rife, the POWs were starved of food and adequate medical supplies.

Over 12 000 POWs, including more than 2700 Australians, died. The number of Asian rōmushadead workers is not known but it was probably up to 90 000.

Now it is a tranquil area of reflection, it is a beautiful landscape which hides the horrors of war.

 When you walk through Hellfire pass and remember that this was totally man-made, you can gain some appreciation given the huge size of the cutting. We are sweating like mad just walking through… The POW’s worked in torrid conditions, their bravery and courage is remembered and the site is dotted with handwritten notes, flags, and mementos, one that stands out is a small koala…

Our Kanchanaburi trip was a somber one, it brought home the tragedies of war, the human stories stay with you, from the gravestones of the fallen to reading about specific Prisoners of War such as Weary Dunlop a surgeon who was legendary for his care of the POW’s. He has come to symbolise the self-sacrifice and courage of those in Kanchanaburi.

This area of Thailand is not to be missed. Lest we forget.

 

Linking with thanks to the hosts at Our World Tuesday

W is for Wandering Hellfire Pass, Kanchanaburi and part of

Blogging from A to Z April (2018) Challenge.

Click here to see the list of all participants!

Thanks so much to the organisers

 

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1 comment

Cathy Kennedy April 28, 2018 - 11:49 pm

Little Wandering Wren,

War is brutal! But, I’m thankful for the monuments honoring the dead for the service. It would be pAwesome to live in a world of peace and we’d never see another war again but we’re human and bound to repeat ourselves. Thanks for sharing!

~Curious as a Cathy
A2Z iPad Art Sketch ‘W’ Water Glass

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