hellfire pass memorial BuRma Thailand Railway

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Transcription:

hellfire pass memorial BuRma Thailand Railway

the hellfire pass memorial is dedicated to the Allied prisoners of war (POWs) and Asian labourers who suffered and died at Hellfire Pass and elsewhere in the Asia Pacific region during the Second World War. a railway to burma In December 1941, the Pacific War began with the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour, Hawaii, and the invasion of Malaya. By mid-1942 Japanese forces were fighting the British in Burma, their ultimate aim being an offensive against India. To maintain their armies in Burma the Japanese needed a more secure supply route than the vulnerable sea-lanes between Singapore and Rangoon. They decided to construct a railway, 415 kilometres long, through jungle and mountain from Ban Pong in Thailand to Thanbyuzayat in Burma.

BRIDGE H E L L F I R E PA 17 7 8 19 20 M U S E U M 1 2 3 4 18 5 Note: Stairs are steep and can become slippery in the wet weather. 6 C A R P A R K distances and timing The estimated walking times indicated are a generous guide. Note: The Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum does not operate a pick-up service at Hintok Road. Guests are responsible for their own pick-up service arrangements. estimated audio walking times Museum to Kwae Noi Valley Lookout (stop 12). Allow 60 minutes for return trip. Museum to Compressor Cutting (All Audio Stops). Allow 3 hours for return trip. Not up to the walk? Find a shady spot and listen to the Audio Stops at your leisure. Listen to as many or as few as you wish. estimated walking times (no audio) Museum to Hintok Road (road pick up). Allow 1½ hours (one way). Museum to Compressor Cutting and return to Hintok Road pick up point. Allow 2½ hours.

12 MEMORIAL 11 S S 16 10 9 Note: for audio stops 13, 14 and 15, see map below. W ater course in w et seaso n 7 km to HIGHWAY 323 Hintok Cutting Three-tier Bridge River Kwae Noi 4km End of walking trail Pickup Point 14 Hintok Station 15 2.5km Double Track Site of 'Pack of Cards' Bridge Compressor Cutting Hintok Road 7m Embankment 1.75km (approx halfway) Hammer & Tap Cutting 13 12 The Kwae Noi Valley Lookout Konyu Cutting (Hellfire Pass) Stairs are steep and slippery in wet weather HIGHWAY 323 300m Start of walking trail MUSEUM ENTRANCE gravel road 3km 2km To Kanchanaburi (80 kms) TRESTLE BRIDGES CUTTINGS/ EMBANKMENTS REST STOPS TOILETS WALKING TRAIL ROUTE OF RAILWAY

building the railway To build the railway the Japanese assembled a multi-national workforce of approximately 270,000 Asian labourers and over 60,000 Australian, British, Dutch and American prisoners of war (POWs). Work on the line began in southern Burma in October 1942 while at the same time construction also started in Thailand. On 16 October 1943, the two ends of the Burma Thailand railway were joined at Konkoita in Thailand. Little modern equipment was made available for railway work. Earth and rock were broken by shovels, picks and chunkels (hoes), and carried away in baskets or sacks. Embankments of stone and earth were heaped up by human endeavour. Cuttings were driven through rock by hand; metal taps and sledgehammers being used to drill holes for explosives. Most of the bridges along the railway were timber trestle bridges made from timber cut in the surrounding jungle. This was the notorious Speedo period. POWs and Asian labourers worked punishing hours well into the night. At Konyu Cutting the flickering bonfire light on the emaciated workers gave the place its name Hellfire Pass. The Speedo, coinciding with the wet season and outbreaks of cholera, claimed thousands of lives. Between December 1943 and August 1945 some 220,000 tons of military supplies were carried over the railway. Allied air raids hindered the railway s operation yet the Japanese continued to move supplies along the route. Today, 130 kilometres of the line remains in use, from Non Pladuk to Namtok. the cost Of the 60,000 Allied POWs who worked on the railway, 12,399 (20 per cent) died. Between 70,000 and 90,000 civilian labourers are also believed to have died. The reasons for this appalling death toll were lack of proper food, totally inadequate medical facilities and, at times, the brutal treatment from guards and railway supervisors. Rice, with a little dried vegetable and dried fish, was the basic food of the POW. This meagre diet provided by the Japanese was supplemented to some extent through trade with local people. Starvation led to a range of diseases, including beriberi and pellagra. Weakened POWs living in appalling conditions, commonly fell ill to malaria, dysentery, cholera and tropical ulcers. POWs lived in attap (woven palm thatch) and bamboo huts. Huts From April 1943, the work pace increased greatly as the Japanese strove to meet a proposed August deadline for completion. POWs work on the Burma-Thailand Railway

were overcrowded and the cooking and sanitary arrangements at camps were primitive. Lack of clothing and footwear increased the risk of illness. Physical punishment was a feature of Japanese military discipline and the POWs were often given severe beatings as well as other forms of punishment. This was at its worst during the Speedo. If anything the Asian labourers, or Romusha as they were known, fared even worse. Unlike the POWs, they had no Army doctors to give them basic medical treatment. v organisation Thailand was a reluctant ally of Japan and Allied interned citizens were well treated by the Thais. Internees became aware of the plight of the POWs. An internee group known as the V Organisation, aided by neutral businessmen and sympathetic Thais, smuggled food and medicines to POWs. peace and after After the completion of the railway the POWs were either kept in Thailand or sent back to Singapore. Hellfire Pass (Konyu Cutting) When the war ended the POW survivors were repatriated and with proper food and medical treatment many quickly recovered. However, most carried the mental scars of their experience with them for the rest of their lives. The POWs who died along the railway were reinterred at the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemeteries at Thanbyuzayat, Kanchanaburi and Chung Kai. American dead were returned to the United States of America.

hellfire pass memorial museum Mr J G (Tom) Morris Photo courtesy of AUSPIC. The preservation and development of this historic site has resulted from the inspiration of Australian former prisoner of war, Mr J G Tom Morris. J G (Tom) Morris was among the thousands of prisoners of war (POWs) and Asian labourers who worked on the Burma- Thailand railway during World War II. Tom enlisted in February 1941, when he was just 17, and served as a Corporal with 22 Brigade Headquarters. Captured as Singapore fell in February 1942, Tom served a threeyear stint as a POW with A-Force, working mostly on the construction of the Burma-Thailand railway. During this time Tom was interned in ten different camps, contracting malaria and dysentery. Later, at the 55 kilo hospital camp he worked as a medical orderly tending other POWs. Forty years after working on the railway, Tom made a decision to return to Thailand to locate Konyu Cutting (Hellfire Pass). In 1984 he was not only successful in locating Hellfire Pass, by then almost consumed by the surrounding jungle, he was inspired to preserve this significant site in memory of all those who suffered and died while constructing the Burma- Thailand railway. Tom approached the Australian Government to have Hellfire Pass dedicated as an historic site. Initially funding was provided to build a memorial, formally dedicated in 1987, and increase access to the site. In 1994, further funding was allocated to build the Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum, walking trails and information displays. The Museum was officially opened on 25 April 1998 and now receives over 80,000 visitors each year. donations Donations to the Hellfire Pass Memorial support the continuing operation of the memorial. The Memorial commemorates the suffering and sacrifices experienced by those Allied prisoners of war and Asian forced labourers who suffered and died on the railway from 1942 1945. The Memorial also acknowledges the suffering and sacrifice by Allied prisoners of war elsewhere in the Pacific during WWII. Thailand, Australia and those nations whose citizens worked on the Burma-Thailand railway. The Office of Australian War Graves operates an account for the receipt of donations or a donation box is located at the entrance to the memorial building. A donor may wish to discuss with staff the option of funds being used P01237 March 2007 Burma-Thailand The Memorial provides an important educational function for the people of Thailand and visitors from Australia and other countries. The Memorial stands as an enduring symbol of the close relationships between for a specific purpose.