
Originally Posted by
Slunnie
You made me look through the pictures from when I was there a few years ago. We walked a short bit of where the death railway passed. An absolutely brutal time there with an incredible mortality rate. Your FIL must have been a tough old coot alright. Its nice that the Australian Govt maintains a memorial and information centre near Hellfire pass so that people can come, visit and understand.
Yes. I have made a few trips there. Dawn Service and all that. The BTRMA does an annual trip called the Quiet Lion Tour, in honour of a bloke they all revered, Edward "Weary" Dunlop. It's not a public tour, but being family I've been. These days they take certain high school kids along. These kids start the tour like they would any, but at the end are quite sobered. I haven't been since he passed, but he would always be the centre of attention in the evenings at our accommodation at Home Pu Thoey.
It shames me to admit that I needed to go to the gym prior to the trip so i could walk the tracks to Hellfire pass from the road about 4 ks away. Thailand in April is hot, and humid, but we had just alighted from an airconditioned bus and had plenty of water etc. These blokes had nothing. "One death for every sleeper" is just a collection of words, until you see.
Simon, have you been to the museum at Kanchanburi? It's opposite the War graves cemetery on Thanon Sangchuto. We always went there between the Dawn Service and the Anzac Parade at the Cemetery at 11:00
I'm still ****ed off that some lowlife would use Neil's name to try it on.
EDIT. We were never able to see where Neil's "camp" was, as Burma is now Myanmar and crossing the border at Three Pagoda Pass, while not impossible, was difficult.
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