Traveling through time on the Burma Death Railway
Bangkok sleeps early. Early morning, that is. As my wife and
I step out of our self-catered apartment in Th Suan Phlu near Lumpini Park at
about 6 am, we are amazed to find not a soul in sight. Less than four hours
earlier, stampede-worthy crowds thronged these very streets, urban explosion at
its detonation point, every nook and cranny crammed with a stall or a vendor or
at least a honking tuktuk. Now, empty. We walk the entire block silently for a
good 800 metres till the corner of Sathorn Road, where a lone pink taxi is
pulled over by the wayside. Without fuss, we alight and utter the magic words.
“Thonburi Station.”
Within a few minutes, we’ve crossed the Chaophraya river,
and bifurcated into a much older city. Derelict buildings and narrow bylanes, our
taxi a time machine. Given its traffic notoriety, we have factored in the usual
2 hour Bangkok commute time. And here we are, in under 10 minutes. 15, tops. As
I stand in the queue at the counter that simply reads “Third Class Passenger
Ticket”, I must admit to a certain rush that courses through me. After all,
this is the infamous Burmese ‘Death Railway’, across the bridge on the river
Kwai into the heart of Thailand’s wild and unspoilt Kanchanaburi province.
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Thonburi Station wakes early. Most unlike Bkk |
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The Nam Tok Express leaves at 7.45 am |
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Seems familiar? |
Rewind to 1939. Asian ‘Axis’ power Japan starts to rampantly
invade much of North and South East Asia. Thailand plays in Asia a role akin to
Switzerland’s in Europe. No direct participation, but tacit support and
occupation by the Japanese. To bring supplies into Burma, there’s only the sea
route via Straits of Malacca, teeming with ‘allied’ submarines. Thus, the need
for a railway link from Thailand into Burma. The Brits have already surveyed
the mountainous terrain and concluded it is impossible to build such a railway.
The Japs think otherwise. The Kempeitai,
Japan’s secret police, not unlike Nazi Germany’s Gestapo, is roped in to expedite this herculean task. Using allied
prisoners of war and unskilled Asian labourers, they set about building the
Burma railway.
What should normally take more than ten years to build, if
at all feasible, is attempted in ten months. Documented stories of abominable
human suffering stand testimony to the building of the Burma railway. The Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) indoctrinated
its soldiers to believe that surrender was dishonourable. POWs were therefore
thought to be unworthy of respect. Severe punishments
were meted out for even minor mistakes, such as failure to salute a Japanese
guard. The sick and the ailing were not excused from duty, often leading to
their deaths. More than 100,000 workers died under brutal
conditions and unimaginable cruelty during the building of this railroad. It is
said that one life was lost for each sleeper laid on this track.

The Burma Railway started operating in early 1944. However,
on 13th February 1945, the British Royal Air Force (RAF) bombed
Bridge 277, the bridge over the Khwae Noi river, and with it, put paid to
Japanese ambitions of world dominion. Most of us know the story through Pierre
Boulle’s war-epic and later David Lean classic ‘The Bridge on the River Kwai’. After
the Japanese surrender, the British removed about 4 kms of track at the Burma
border. The track was sold to Thai Railway, who re-laid the Thai side of the
railway between Ban Pong and Nam Tok. This section continues to be in use
today. The present bridge has two of its central spans rebuilt. The original
parts that were bombed can be seen at the War Museum.
* * *
The third class compartment aboard the Nam Tok Express isn’t
half bad. Although non air-con, the seats match First Class offerings elsewhere
in South Asia. What’s more, apart from the excellent pre-packed fruit and satay
packets, the local vendors walking up and down the train aisle also carry beer.
As we leave Bangkok behind us, the verdant greenery of rural Thailand dazzles.
Before long, we are in mountain country. Although the train stops at Kanchanaburi,
we choose to continue all the way to Nam Tok, crossing the bridge across Kwai,
and later the Wampo Viaduct, built along the cliff side above the river. The
train grinds slowly across the viaduct, also built painstakingly by the wartime
labourers.
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The Third Class Compartment |
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A traveller awaits his station eagerly |
As we cross the Wampo, a persistent vision of tens of thousands of sickly
men laying tracks along the impossible bends conjure up. Today, the scenery is
picture postcard tropical paradise. In fact, when the POW’s were first sent into
Thailand, there was a rumour that they have been ‘upgraded’ and will spend the
rest of their war in comfort, as was promised to them in the earlier camps in
Japan. Little did they know.
We hire a local taxi at Nam Tok, and although we had
considered a trip to ‘Hellfire Pass’, a disused section of the railway where
one can walk for miles along the track, the midday sun and humidity levels have
crossed into the red. The prospect of a cold towel at
U Inchantree
in Kanchanaburi beckons. Disappointed, we aren’t. A delightful property,
literally five minutes downriver from the famous bridge, every earthly comfort
thought of (at earthly prices), I recommend it thoroughly. There are other
options of course, among which the quirkiest would be to stay on the water
itself, on rafts built on stilts. Be warned though. Late evenings won’t be
quiet, especially on weekends, as Thai and Korean Karaoke parties pierce into
the stillness. Mercifully, our hotel was located on the other bank, relatively
immune to these attacks.
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U Inchantree Resort, Kanchanaburi. Enchanting, it is |
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The sit-out on the Kwai river |
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The hotel has it's own pier |
There are 3 museums and 2 cemeteries dedicated to the
Burmese Railway POW’s, all within Kanchanaburi town itself. Although we visited
each of them, I particularly recommend the Death Railway Museum & Research
Centre for a thorough and moving experience. The Thai War museum is interesting in a different way, with life-size sculptures of scenes re-enacted. POW’s laying tracks, while Japanese policemen with sticks and pistols hovering above them, cigarettes dangling from contorted lips. A train bogey with sickly workers’ bodies heaped inside. My favourite one is a wall with Allied leaders on one side, and Axis on the other. Hitler, Mussoulini, Stalin, Churchill, they’re all here. One sign on the wall reads- “War is sinful behavior.” Another one, profound- “Peace is the behavior merit.” Clearly, some translation losses have been incurred.
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From the Death Railway Museum & Research Centre |
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The Thai War Museum is gigantic |
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Life-Size depictions of Death Railway scenes |
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The feared Kempeitai, Japan's secret police |
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Ahem. Indeed |
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Good example of Th's continuing demand for English teachers |
Next morning, we start early and set out on a jeep across
the Khwae Noi valley towards the river mouth. The spectacular drive takes us up
to Erawan National Park, where the seven-tiered Erawan Falls awaits. If there’s
one reason to visit this part of the world, this would clearly be it. As we
keep ascending from the lower tiers to its upper reaches, the water keeps
getting bluer, and the bathers scarcer. We pitch anchor at tier 6. If only the
fish wouldn’t gnaw at us so, this would indeed be paradise.
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Panaromic shot of Kanchanaburi province |
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The river mouth. Ethereal |
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Tier 3 of the 7-tiered Erawan Falls |
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Father and son pontificate |
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Each tier of Erawan Falls offers something different |
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Tier 6, where we found our bliss |
A further hour’s drive
into the national park takes us to the Phra That cave site. Warning. This
involves a serious climb. About 2000 steps cut into a steep mountain side. Aah,
but the rewards. Stunning stalactite and stalagmites like I’ve never seen
before. Entire cave walls made of quartz. One of the formations resembles a
sitting Buddha. It is astonishing.
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The trek up to Phrathat Caves |
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The cave entrance belies its massive size |
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The last of available light as we descend |
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Entire walls made of quartz |
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Myriad stalachtite/stalagmite formations |
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The curtains deep underneath |
All good things do come to an end. If we had another week,
we would ride on an elephant, walk along the death railway tracks to the
Hellfire Pass, hire bicycles and ride along the Khwae Noi river, or just float
on a boat upstream, fine tuning the art of doing nothing. Instead, we find
ourselves aboard a minibus on the third day, ziplining into Bangkok’s outer
reaches in under two hours.
The city has woken up, though. It takes a further
two to see us back to the condo.
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