Death Railway Museum

Beez Neez now Chy Whella
Big Bear and Pepe Millard
Sat 9 Dec 2017 22:57
Death Railway Museum, Thanbyuzayat
 
 
 
 IMG_0092  IMG_0094
 
After our emotional visit to the War Graves our driver dropped us outside the gates of the Death Railway Museum. Criticised by many on various forums, we came with an open mind. Certainly impressed so far.
 
 
IMG_0097  IMG_0096
 
As we walked up the path, a very powerful glass panel with the words One Life, One Sleeper, beyond stood four emaciated railway workers, frozen forever in toil.
 
 
 IMG_0241
 
We walk in to find a massive wall and floor painting of the railway. Above right is a television screen showing a film made by a brother and sister who walk the line (or what’s left of it) in Thailand, a mammoth task in the heat, with few directions but they meet loads of nice people along the way. Very moving.
 
 
IMG_0105  IMG_0106  IMG_0111 (2)
 
The next room is set out like barracks with wall paintings.
 
 
IMG_0110  IMG_0104
 
IMG_0108  IMG_0109
 
Along the back wall was a wall painting showing the railway and the air con units were part of the painting. Further round from the emaciated soldiers was a diorama depicting a Japanese officer and his subordinate.
 
 
IMG_0113
 
A glass information panel showed this map and read: The Japanese Expansion
What was the ‘Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere’ ?
This included countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Malaysia, Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, French Indochina, The Dutch East India.
Japan wanted these countries to be part of its empire.
These countries held oil, tin and rubber which were important resources for Japan to be self-sufficient.
These countries would also serve as markets for Japanese goods.
Japan used the term ‘Co-Prosperity’ to get Asians to believe that all the countries in the sphere would benefit economically through this arrangement.
 
 
IMG_0117
 
Upstairs, we found many photographs of the time and behind them were two sets of glass information boards that we have typed here – exactly as we saw them. The mistakes do not detract from the message and are quite quaint in their own way.
 
 
IMG_0138
 
Constructing The Railway
Purpose
There were four main purposes in constructing the railway. They were:-
1. To transport ammunition in the fight for the Greater Asia.
2. To transport Burma’s export and import goods.
3. To build friendship with other countries.
4. To make Burma prosper.
To be able to accomplish the above mention purpose, Workers Recruitments Group was formed and chaired by U Ba Saw.
Planning
Surveyed by the British government of Burma as early as 1885. In early 1942, Japanese forces invaded Burma. To supply their forces in Burma, the Japanese depended upon the sea, bringing supplies and troops to Burma through the Strait of Malacca and the Andaman Sea. This route was vulnerable to be a tacked by Allied. To avoid it a railway from Bangkok to Rangoon seemed a feasible alternative. The Japanese began the project in June 1942.
Constructing
After preliminary work of airfields and infrastructure, construction of the railway began in Burma on 15 September 1942 and in Thailand in November. On 17 October 1943, construction gangs originating in Burma met up with construction gangs originating in Thailand at kilometer 263, about 18 km (11 mi) south of the Three Pagodas Pass. The projected completed in December 1943.
Logistics
When the British left Burma in 1940-41, 2852 miles (4589 km) of rail-track were left in Burma. Among those rail-track, Japan took 150 miles of track from Yangon-Taungoo Duel Track and about 150 miles of track from Dadaroo-Myingyan and other tracks.
Facts of the Railway
The Death Railway was a 415-kilometre (258 mi) railway between Ban Pong, Thailand, and Thanbyuzayat, Burma, built by the Empire of Japan in 1943 to support its forces in the Burma campaign of World War II. This railway completed the railroad between Bangkok, Thailand and Rangoon, Burma (now Yangon). The line was closed in 1947.
More than 180,000 – possibly many more – Asian civilian labourers (Romusha) and 60,000 Allied prisoners of war (POWs) worked on the railway.
Of these, estimates of Romusha deaths are little more than guesses, but probably about 90,000 died. 12,621 Allied POWs died during the construction. The dead POWs included 6,904 British personnel, 2,802 Australians, 2,782 Dutch, and 133 Americans. 69 miles (111 km) of the railway were in Burma and the remaining 189 (304 km) were in Thailand.
 
 
IMG_0150  IMG_0151
 
Invasion of Burma (Myanmar)
The Japanese invasion was carried out by General Shojiro Iida’s Fifteenth Army together with 30 comrades of Burma and 3,000 Mons who joined them at Bangkok. The main purpose was to cut the Burma Road connecting to China. The invasion was followed by the signing of a treaty of friendship on 14 December 1941 with Thailand. On the following day the first Japanese troops entered Burma in the Kra Isthmus. The plan involved two main thrusts. First the Southern Army would attack the southern tip of Burma to occupy the British airfields, and then Gen. Iida would cross the border from Reheng, and advance towards Rangoon. Japan would then be able to advance north up the main Burmese river valleys.
The Campaign
First Phase
On 16 January 1942 a Japanese battalion occupied Victoria Point (Kwak Thaung). Tavoy fell on 19 January. The main Japanese invasion came from Raheng. They were blocked at Kawkareik. Moulmein (Mawlamyine) fell on 31 January. The British retreat across the Sittang on 19 February, and cross the river on the night of 21-22 February. On the following morning two Japanese regiments attacked the bridgehead on the eastern bank on the river. At 05:30 AM of 23 February, the bridge was blown. The British pulled back to Pegu, half way to Rangoon. Pegu fell and a Japanese division was closing in to the Yangon city on 5 March, sweeping around the city to the north to attack from the west. The British realized that they couldn’t hold Rangoon, and ordered an evacuation to leave along the road to Prome (Pyi), they ran into a Japanese roadblock.
On 8 March, as the last British train left Rangoon, the Japanese marched into the undefended city from the west.
After the fall of Rangoon the fighting died down. During the rest of March, both sides received reinforcements and prepared for the second phase of the campaign – the inevitable Japanese attack north into the heart of Burma.
Second Phase
Serious fighting resumed in late March. The Japanese advanced into the center, to Toungoo (30 March) and Mandalay (1 May), and to the east, reaching Lashio (29 April), cutting the Burma Road. In the west Japanese army advanced up the Irrawaddy against the British, forcing them out of Prome (2 April) and Magwe (16 April). On 21 April, Alexander ordered general retreat across the Irrawaddy, and on 26 April the British began their long retreat back to the Indian border.
The British and Burmese lost 13,463 men during the campaign in Burma, while the Chinese may have lost as many as 40,000 men. Japanese losses were much lower, at 4,597 dead and wounded. The battle in the air was a little more equal, with 116 aircrafts lost by the Allies and a similar number by the Japanese.
 
 
IMG_0163
 
Workers (POWs and The Sweat Army) Myanmar.
At first, workers were collected from the nearby area but later the construction team asked for help from the Interim Government of Burma (Myanmar) in mid December in 1942.
The ministry of information announced to form a Sweat Army to construct the railway on 18th December 1942. The announcement described that 20,000 workers are needed and the salary, accommodation, medication and other opportunities and also called to enter into the Sweat Army.
Workers were collected from Taunggoo, Innsein, Hinthada, Pathein, Dawei, Myeik, Mawlamyine, Thaton, and Pegu area. Up until February 1943, totally 13,950 workers were collected. This was just a little more than half of the targeted numbers and a lot of workers ran away. The 15th Japanese Army have to fine ways to get the needed workers because the railway needed to be finished in time. The Japanese Army discussed with Railway construction team military head and administration department to recruit voluntary workers in 1st March 1943. The 15th Japanese Army ordered to set up the workforce and to transport them on 2nd March.
More 30,000 workers were recruited until 9 March 1943 to work in Myanmar-Thailand railway. The Burmese (Myanmar)) Army was Blood Army and therefore the workers were named Sweat Army. They were later named “Bama Let Yon Tart”  (Bama’s Strength Army). The Minister of Transportation and Irrigation, acted as chair of recruitment committee, appointed the District Administrators as leaders of recruitment team and recruited workers through the help of Township Administrators and Village Heads. “ Doh Bama Sinyethar Aseayon” (We Burman Poors Association) also helped to recruit workers. Military Administration provided 210,000 Kyats as a recruitment cost. 32,204 voluntary workers were recruited within a short time and transported as the first group. But there were a lot of workers running away.
Therefore the the 15th Army hasto discuss with military administration to recruit 21,000 more. The first recruitment were done in nine different districts and the second recruitment was done in Kyaukse, Maoobin, Minbu, Pakakku and Thayet districts. The recruitment leaders were also extended from 1000 per one leader to 100 par one leader. The second recruitment brought in 18,615 workers. Because of workers were running away the 15th Japanese Army again have to ask for help in July 1943 to recruit 20,000 more workers. This time was recruited from Shwebo, Kathar and Monywa districts and 21,069 more workers were recruited this time. A Patriot Youth Group called Heihi was set up in Burma’s Japanese Armies HQ. The New Light of Myanmar newspaper describe on 20th April 1943 to enter into Heiho. This Heiho Army played a central role recruiting workers.
 
 
IMG_0155
 
Japanese
12,000 Japanese soldiers, including 800 Koreans were employed on the railroad as engineers, guards, and supervisors, about 1,000 (8 percent) of them died during the construction.
Romusha
The first prisoners of war, 3,000 Australians, to go to Burma departed Changi Prison in Singapore on 14 May 1942 and journeyed by sea to neat Thanbyuzayat, the northern terminus of the railway. They worked on airfields and other infrastructure initially before beginning construction of the railway in October 1942. In early 1943, the Japanese advertised for workers in Malaya, Singapore and the Dutch East Indies, promising good wages, short contracts, and housing for families. When that failed to attract sufficient workers, they resorted to more coercive methods, rounding up workers and impressing them, especially in Malaya. Approximately 90,000 Burmese and 75,000 Malayans worked on the railroad. Other nationalities and ethnic groups working on the railway were Tamil, Chinese, Karen, Javanese and Singaporean Chinese.
Prisoners of War
The first prisoners of war, 3,000 Australian, to go to Burma departed Changi Prison at Singapore on the 14th May 1942 and journeyed by sea to near Thanbyuzayat, the northern terminus of the railway. They worked on airfields and other infrastructure initially before beginning construction of the railway in October 1942. The first prisoners of war to work in Thailand, 3,000 British soldiers, left Changi by train in June 1942 to Ban Pong, the southern terminus of the railway. More prisoners of war were imported from Singapore and the Dutch East Indies as construction advanced.
 
 
IMG_0157  IMG_0160
 
Conditions
The prisoners of war “found themselves at the bottom of a social system that was harsh, punitive, fanatical and often deadly. The living and working conditions on the Burma Railway were often describes as “horrific”, with maltreatment, sickness, and starvation.
 
 
IMG_0161
 
Living
Construction camps housed at least 1,000 workers. Each was established every five to ten miles (8 to 187 km) of the route. The construction camps consisted of open sided barracks built of bamboo poles with thatched roofs. The barracks were about sixty metres (66 yards) long with sleeping platforms raised above the ground on each side of an earthen floor. Two hundred men were housed in each barracks, giving each man a two-foot wide space in which to live and sleep. Camps were usually named after the kilometre where they were located.
 
 
IMG_0164
 
Working
Working conditions for the Romusha were deadly. A British doctor said “the conditions in the coolie (Romusha) camps downriver are terrible.....They are kept isolated from Japanese and British camps. They have no latrines. Special British prisoner parties.....bury about twenty coolies a day. These coolies have been brought under false pretence – ‘easy work, good pay, good houses!’ some have even brought wives and children. Now they find themselves dumped in these charnel houses, driven and brutally knocked about by the Jap and Korean guards, unable to buy extra food, bewildered, sick, frightened. Yet many of them have shown extraordinary kindness to sick British prisoners passing down the river, giving them sugar and helping them into the railway trucks. The workers were moved up and down the railroad according to the need of the construction. Moreover, the road was constructed only with basic tools without any machine”.
 
 
IMG_0162
 
Health
In his book, Last Man Out, H. Robert Charles, an American Marine survivor of the sinking of the USS Houston, writes in depth about a Dutch doctor, Henri Hekking, a fellow POW who probably save the lives of many who worked on the “Death Railway”. In the forward to Charles’s book James D. Hornfischer summarises: “Dr. Henri Hekking was a tower of psychological and emotional strength, almost shamanic in his power to find and improvise medicines from the wild prison of the jungle”. Hekking died in 1994. Charles died in December 2009.
Entertainment
One of the ways the Allied POWs kept their spirits up was to ask one of the musicians in their midst to play his guitar or accordion, or lead them in a group sing along, or request their camp comedians to tell some jokes or put on a skit.
 
 
IMG_0217.
 
 Outside, we walked to the end of the of the track which now looks very benign. Just a few feet in front of it is the main line.
 
 
IMG_0224  IMG_0226  IMG_0228
 
We walked back along the track to the perimeter gate, passing a pile of bent and battered rails (originals)........
 
 
IMG_0214  PC090020
 
IMG_0206
 
........stopping by two statues of Japanese soldiers to stand beside C.O.522. 
 
 
IMG_0230  IMG_0231
 
Heading back inside passing the outdoor wall paintings.
 
 
IMG_0184  IMG_0182  IMG_0183 
 
IMG_0181
 
Pictures of sad. remnants
 
 
IMG_0172
 
 
 
 
 
ALL IN ALL VERY WELL PUT TOGETHER
                     BEAUTIFULLY PRESENTED