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Page 1: Thailand commemorations

In Thailand - and Burma(Myanmar) - it is possible to visitthe graves and memorialscommemorating the lives of10,000 British, Dutch, Australianand New Zealander soldiers heldprisoner by the Japanese duringthe Second World War.

History

Many of the soldiers died fromsickness, malnutrition and exhaustionin the process of building thenotorious Thai-Burma railway; it hasbeen calculated that one man diedfor every single sleeper that was laid.

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission isresponsible for marking and maintaining the gravesof members of the forces of Commonwealthcountries who died in the two world wars, forbuilding and maintaining memorials to the deadwhose graves are unknown and for providingrecords and registers of these burials andcommemorations, totalling 1.7 million and foundin most countries throughout the world.

Commonwealth War Graves Commission2 Marlow Road MaidenheadBerkshireSL6 7DXUnited KingdomTel: +44 (0) 1628 634221Fax: +44 (0) 1628 771643E-mail: [email protected]

A guide to Thailand’s W

orld War cem

eteries

Japan’s decision to build the railway wasprovoked by the need to improvecommunications to maintain the large Japanesearmy in Burma. They utilised a labour forcecomprised of prisoners of war taken in thecampaigns in South-East Asia and the Pacific,along with forced labour brought from Malaya(Malaysia/Singapore) and the Dutch East Indies(Indonesia) or conscripted in Thailand andBurma.

The first of those to arrive were tasked withconstructing their own prisoner of war campsat Kanchanaburi and Ban Pong in Thailand andThanbyuzayat in Burma. It is at these sites thatyou can now visit the cemeteries where themen who died building the railway wereultimately buried.

THEIR NAME LIVETH FOR EVERMORE

Page 2: Thailand commemorations

Throughout the building of therailway, food supplies were irregularand totally inadequate. Red Crossparcels helped, but these wereinvariably held up by the Japanese.Malaria, dysentery and pellagra (avitamin deficiency disease) attackedthe prisoners, and the number ofsick in the camps was always high.

Work on the railway started atThanbyuzayat on 1 October 1942and somewhat later at Ban Pong. Thetwo parties met at Konkuita inOctober 1943, and the line - 424kilometres long - was completed byDecember. Thereafter, work on therailway consisted of maintenanceand repairs to damage caused byAllied bombing.

The graves of those who died duringthe construction and maintenance ofthe Thai-Burma railway (exceptAmericans, who were repatriated)have been transferred from thecamp burial grounds and solitarysites along the railway into threewar cemeteries. Those recoveredfrom the southern part of the linenow rest in Chungkai War Cemeteryand Kanchanaburi War Cemetery inThailand. Those from the northernhalf of the line lie in the WarCemetery at Thanbyuzayat in Burma.

Kanchanaburi War Cemetery

In close proximity to the River Kwai (picturedbelow, left) this cemetery is only a shortdistance from the site of the former “Kanburi”prisoner of war base camp. Most of theprisoners passed through this camp and itrepresents the largest of the three warcemeteries on the Burma-Thailand railway.

A two hour drive from Bangkok, the cemetery isbest reached by road along the national highwaywhich runs north from the capital. Bus and trainservices, along the so-called ‘Death Railway’, alsorun from Bangkok.

With most of the base camps and hospitalssituated in this area, there are nearly 7,000burials here at Kanchanaburi. All the graves aremarked by bronze plaques mounted on concretepedestals. In the entrance building is a bronzememorial tablet recording the names of 11soldiers of the army of undivided India, buried inMuslim civil cemeteries in Thailand, whose gravesare unmaintainable.

A register of the graves is available on site, as isthe case at Chungkai and Thanbyuzayat.

Chungkai War Cemetery

There are over 1,700 burials at this cemetery,located 200 metres from the bank of the RiverKwai and just 5 kilometres south ofKanchanaburi. Another of the base camps on theThai-Burma-Siam railway, Chungkai contained ahospital and church built by Allied prisoners ofwar. The prisoners themselves built ChungkaiWar Cemetery. Those who rest here are mostlymen who died in the hospital.

The entrance pavilion is built of local materials,roofed by tiles in traditional Thai colours. A long central avenue runs from the altar-likeStone of Remembrance, just inside thecemetery, to the Cross of Sacrifice. The words‘Their name liveth for evermore’, taken fromthe Book of Ecclesiasticus, are carved on theStone.

The Cross, like the Stone of Remembrance, iscommon to most Commonwealth warcemeteries. It is set upon an octagonal baseand bears a bronze sword upon its shaft.

Thanbyuzayat War Cemetery (Burma)

With Burma opening up, accessing thiscemetery has become more straightforward.

It was built by Japanese prisoner of war labourto transport supplies and troops throughThailand to their army in Burma.

T H E I R N A M E L I V E T H F O R E V E R M O R E