
 Originally Posted by 
Tombie
					
				 
				Went and visited the region, including Hellfire pass.
A place to reflect on both the cruelty and compassion of man.
			
		 
	 
 Went with Neil a few of times around ANZAC Day. Toured the camp locations etc. Always culminated with the Dawn Service at Hellfire. I confess that after the first trip I avoided the day long trips to the temples and ruins in order to spend time in Bangkok, an incredible city.
The cruelty, and compassion, as you put it Mike, are in the stories those old blokes told. The Thai and Burmese natives risked their lives smuggling food to the POWs. Would have been ( and more than a few were ) shot or beheaded if caught.
But it was blokes like Neil who instigated the formation of a specific tour, known as The Quiet Lion Tour ( if you know about Weary that name won't need explanation ) so people, especially modern youth ( tour always had high school kids, and rural Thailand doesn't have great mobile reception.... ) could learn stuff no school will teach. Sure as hell taught me a thing or two. My readings of WWII were mostly about the European war until I did the tour the first time. Neil told me many stories, of course, but he lived in WA so I didn't talk to him as much as I would have liked.
Neil went to a camp in Japan after the Railway, to work in a coal mine near Nagasaki of all places. Yes, he was there on the 9th of August, 1945.
He led a delegation back to the village in Japan where he was held. He did this for the purpose of reconciliation. This was in about 2008. he met one of the guards from that time, who wept and asked forgiveness, which was given. Neil Ormiston MacPherson, AO. He deserved the Order, he worked tirelessly towards reconciliation. He has passed, but he was proud of his half Japanese grandsons.
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
			
				JayTee
Nullus Anxietus
Cancer is gender blind. 
2000 D2 TD5 Auto:                Tins
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