Thailand the Jeath War Museum Kanchanaburi Die Brücke am Kwai Prisoner of War Museum
Das JEATH-Museum (Gefangenenmuseum, War Museum) ist ein Museum in der Stadt Kanchanaburi in Zentral-Thailand. Das Museum liegt etwa 300 Meter von der Brücke über den Khwae Yai
The JEATH War Museum is one of two war museums in Thailand about the Death Railway built from 1942 to 1943 by Allied POWs under the direction of the Japanese, a part of the famous Thai-Burma railways
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Death Railway Thailand. Kanchanaburi
In 1943 thousands of Allied Prisoners of War (PoW) and Asian labourers worked on the Death Railway under the imperial Japanese army in order to construct part of the 415 km long Burma-Thailand railway. Most of these men were Australians, Dutch and British and they had been working steadily southwards from Thanbyuzayat (Burma) to link with other PoW on the Thai side of the railway. This railway was intended to move men and supplies to the Burmese front where the Japanese were fighting the British. Japanese army engineers selected the route which traversed deep valleys and hills. All the heavy work was done manually either by hand or by elephant as earth moving equipment was not available. The railway line originally ran within 50 meters of the Three Pagodas Pass which marks nowadays the border to Burma. However after the war the entire railway was removed and sold as it was deemed unsafe and politically undesirable. The prisoners lived in squalor with a near starvation diet. They were subjected to captor brutality and thus thousands perished. The men worked from dawn until after dark and often had to trudge many kilometres through the jungle to return to base camp where Allied doctors tended the injured and diseased by many died. After the war the dead were collectively reburied in the War Cemeteries and will remain forever witness to a brutal and tragic ordeal.
River Ships to carry POW's World War II, Kanchanaburi War Museum
JEATH War Museum. Kanchanaburi. Vlog No 137
A Trip to JEATH War Museum. Kanchanaburi
The museum was founded in 1977 by the chief abbot of Wat Chaichumpol Venerable Phra Theppanyasuthee. It is located on the grounds of a temple at the junction of the Khwae Yai and Khwae Noi rivers in Kanchanaburi and it is a part of the famous The Bridge over the River Kwai
The acronym JEATH stands for the primary nationalities involved in the construction of the railway: Japanese, English, Australian, American, Thai and Holland, whereas the Thai name is Phíphítháphan Songkhram Wát Tâi (Wat Tai War Museum)
The museum is divided into two sections, one depicting the construction of the Death Railway which is meant to recreate the quarters used by Allied POWs, and the other consisting of reconstructed bamboo huts containing such items as paintings, drawings and photos of and by former prisoners, weapons, tools, and maps
Map ref= JEATH War Museum. Kanchanaburi
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Colin in Thailand โคลินในประเทศไทย
I've lived here since 2011, in a small village. What I am presenting for your viewing is Life, away from the cities, the tourist traps, the bars and easy girls (or ladyboys even), the influences from western culture, like skyscrapers, Macdonalds, and KFC. I bring you the sights and sounds that farangs (which is what Thais call any foreigner) never experience.
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'Railway of Death' - POW Burma-Siam (Thailand) railway
By permission of the Imperial War museum for this project. Silent.
Filmed shortly after the end of World War Two - some of the aftermath of the 258 mile long Burma-Thailand (Siam) railway, constructed by a slave force of POWs and Asian civilians 1942-43. Known as the 'Railway of Death' it claimed the lives of an estimated 16,000 'allied' troops and 90,000 Asian labourers. Working on this railway was the fate of the majority of those captured by the japanese in Singapore, many being sent up on railway cars to Kanburi (now Kanchanaburi) base west of Bangkok, the start of the railway in Thailand (then Siam). This is also near the infamous 'Bridge on the River Kwai.
Starts at Thanbyuzayat railway sidings at the beginning of the Burma section, and here Japanese soldiers unload stores - most likely filmed by a British unit after the end of war. Three British officers of the No 3 Indian Army Graves Registration Unit examine map of railway and later the Japanese soldier seen earlier talks with British officers.
Wooden signs mark graves and one reads 'Allied Cemetery -17 Graves -150 metres'. At the end two of the grave signs read: 'AIF-Driver JL'. Many more must be lost in the jungle.
Kanchanaburi War Cemetery Thailand HD
The Kanchanaburi War Cemetery (known locally as the Don-Rak War Cemetery).
It is just 3 minute walking distance from Kanchnaburi railway station.
Entry is free.
Opening time is 8 am to 5 pm.
It is the main prisoner of war (POW) cemetery for victims of Japanese imprisonment while building the Burma Railway.
It is on the main road, Saeng Chuto Road, through the town of Kanchanaburi, Thailand, adjacent to an older Chinese cemetery.
The cemetery was designed by Colin St Clair Oakes and is maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
There are 6,982 POWs buried there, mostly Australian, British, and Dutch.
The Kanchanaburi Memorial gives the names of 11 from India.
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River Kwai Tour Highlights | Kanchanaburi Thailand | Death Railway | Ahsan's Window
Highlights of our visit to Kanchanaburi from Bangkok, covering historical sites related to death railway.
01:31 The journey starts from Bangkok to Kanchanaburi
02:07 Kanchanaburi War Cemetery
02:53 JEATH War Museum
03:40 Feeding the fish in River Kwai
04:40 Thakilen Railway Station
05:04 The Bridge on The River Kwai
05:37 Walking over the famous River Kwai Bridge
06:39 Elephant Trekking
07:10 Bamboo Rafting
We left hotel by 6:45 am to visit all historical places as a part of full day Kanchanaburi River Kwai tour including elephant trekking, bamboo rafting and lunch. We left Kanchanaburi by 4 pm and came back to our hotel by almost 6:30 pm due to heavy traffic in the Bangkok city.
Important relevant information is provided across the video intermittently which at some time may not be displayed for a longer time. You are requested to pause the video and read, if interested.
BRIEFING ON THE KANCHANABURI HISTORICAL PLACES
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DEATH RAILWAY: After entering the Second World War in Dec. 1941, Japanese forces quickly overran most of South East Asia. In 1942, in order to find a shorter and more secure line of supply between Burma (Myanmar) and Siam (Thailand), the Japanese decided to user prisoners of war and civilian labour to build a single line railway to link existing railheads at Thanbyuzayat in the west and Ban Pong in the east. Two forces, one based in Siam and one in Burma, worked from opposite ends of the line, meeting at Konkuita in October 1943. The project cost the lives of approx. 15,000 prisoners of war and 100,000 civilians as a result of sickness, malnutrition, exhaustion and mistreatment.
All the heavy work was done manually either by hand or by elephant. The men worked from dawn until after dark and often had to walk many kilometres through the jungle to return to base camp for getting treatment by Allied doctors. They were subject to extreme violence, torture, physical punishment, humiliation and neglect.
KANCHANABURI WAR CEMETERY contains the remains of 6,982 Australian, Dutch and British war prisoners who lost their lives during the construction of the Death Railway. Another war cemetery about 2 km south of town on the Kwai River that contains 1,740 remains (1,379 British, 313 Netherlands, 42 Malayan & 6 India). It was the site of a base camp, a hospital and a church built by the prisoners themselves.
JEATH WAR MUSEUM inside Wat Chai Chumpion has been constructed in the form of an Allied Prisoner of War camp. The bamboo huts contains photographic, pictorial and few memorabilia dating the World War II. JEATH stands for Japan, England, Austrialia, Thailand and Holland the primary nations which participated in local action.
THE BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI became internationally famous when it was featured in movies and books. The Bridge River Kwai is a tourist destination. The track is developed into a walkway with side platforms which are useful as viewpoints for the natural beauty of the surrounding mountains and valleys.
Every year, River Kwai Bridge Festival is organized to mark the Allied bombing on November 28, 1944. Spectacular light and sound show is the highlight of the festival.
Please watch other videos of our trip to Thailand from the list given below:
Tiger Kingdom, Phuket. Locked in a cage with Tiger ????
Safari World Bangkok
Marine Park Bangkok
James Bond Island, Phuket
Trickeye / 3D Museum / Optical Illusion - Phuket
Khao Rang Hill Phuket Viewpoint
Phi Phi Islands One Day Tour from Phuket
Adventurous Day at a WILDLIFE SANCTUARY near Phuket
Fantasea – A Thai night-time cultural theme park
Phuket Zoo
#RiverKwai #DeathRailway #Kanchanaburi #JeathWarMuseum #TheBridgeOnTheRiverKwai #BambooRafting #ElephantTrekking #DonRak #ChonkKai #WarMuseum #ThailandandBurmaRailway #ThreePagodasPass #DavidLean #LePontDeLariviereKwai #PierreBoulle #BritishPOWs #JapanesePrisonCamp #TheRailwayMan #ThailandTourism
WWII Building Burma's Death Railway - BBC Part 1
The brutal use of British prisoners of war by the Japanese to build a railway linking Thailand to Burma in 1943 was one of the worst atrocities of the Second World War. For the first time in 70 years, British POWs and their Japanese captors, many now in their nineties, open their hearts to tell the story of what really happened on the 'Death Railway'. Alongside the extraordinary experiences and stories of survival told by the British, their Japanese guards tell of different horrors of war, some never disclosed before.
Exploring how they have survived the terrible memories, this is an often inspiring story that many of these men have waited a long time to tell. What emerges is a warm and emotional journey through the lives of men from different sides reflecting on a terrible event that still haunts them.
Jeath War Museum Kanchanaburi Thailand - WHIBT
Jeath War Museum Kanchanaburi Thailand
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Hellfire Pass Museum - The death railway...Kanchanaburi.. Vlog No 120
A Trip to Hellfire Pass Museum - The death railway...Kanchanaburi
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See an important reminder of World War II at Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum and Walking Trail, commemorating part of the route of the Burma Railway. Known also as the Death Railway, the line was constructed by POWs held by Japanese forces, along with Asian slave-laborers. This particular section was cut through solid rock by Allied prisoners and slaves working under treacherous conditions, with little rest or food. Now a museum, the site allows you to walk through the valley and learn about this tragic period in human history, with a range of exhibits and touching memorials to those that suffered here.
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A trip to see Sai Yok Noi Waterfall, Sai Yok, Kanchanaburi: Thailand Vloggers No 96 --
Colin in Thailand โคลินในประเทศไทย
I've lived here since 2011, in a small village. What I am presenting for your viewing is Life, away from the cities, the tourist traps, the bars and easy girls (or ladyboys even), the influences from western culture, like skyscrapers, Macdonalds, and KFC. I bring you the sights and sounds that farangs (which is what Thais call any foreigner) never experience.
After all the time I have lived here, I call them farangs, too. Because my wife and I have become a part of this village, where everybody knows us, and we know everybody.
This is the Real Thailand.
======================================================
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Moving Half the Mountain - Death Railway Stories | History Documentary | Reel Truth. History
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In 1943, British prisoners of war were forced to build a railway that would link Thailand and Burma. Now, for the first time in 70 years some of the survivors and their Japanese captors tell their stories of what really happened on the 'death railway'.
Welcome to ReelTruth.History the home of gripping and powerful documentaries. Here you can watch both full length documentaries and series that explore some of the most comprehensive pieces of world history.
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[Thailand] The Faith of Allied POWs under Japanese Captivity - the Death Railway
In this special episode: the Death Railway (1942 - 1945), sometimes referred to by the Burma Railway or the Siam–Burma Railway. During the Second World War the Japanese used forced labour for constructing a railway from Thailand to Birma. Many westerners (for example soldiers of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army that were captured after the Japanese conquest of the Dutch East Indies) and Asians had to work under inhumane conditions.
History Hustle presents: The Faith of Allied POWs under Japanese Captivity - the Death Railway
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Edited by TH Producties
thproducties.nl / facebook.com/thproducties
Recorded on 7 December 2015 in Kanchanaburi, Thailand.
With the help of Daniel from Australia. Thank you!
World War II POW and Bridge Over the River Kwai History Photos, Kanchanaburi
World War II and JEATH War Museum
Kanchanaburi | JEATH War Museum
Kanchanaburi is a town in west Thailand. It’s known for the Death Railway, built during WWII. The line crosses over the River Khwae Yai via the Death Railway Bridge. Displays at the JEATH War Museum honor the prisoners of war who died building the bridge. The Thailand–Burma Railway Centre explores the wider history of the railway. Nearby, thousands of Allied soldiers are buried at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery.
Known among locals as the Museum - Kanchanaburi [Thailand Travel]
Known among locals as the Museum of Chong Khao Kad, it is a part of the Death Railway that was built cruelly by prisoners of war during the World War II. Hellfire or Chong Khao Kad is spot where the railway needed to cut through the mountain, which was really impossible but the POWs and labors were forced to use hand drills, picks and shovels to carve the rock so that a train could pass. The 500-meter-long pass was incredibly completed in six months in 1943, with many lives were sacrificed. The pass is no longer in use and it becomes the museum to exhibit related tools and photographs about the historical event to remind people the importance of world peace.
Opening hours: Daily from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Admission: Free.
Contact: Tel. 08 1814 7564, 08 1754 2098, 0 3453 1347; Fax. 0 3453 1347
Getting there: The site is located in a thick forest near Km. 66 of the Sai Yok-Thong Pha Phum Road (Highway No. 323).
Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum
Thailand Travel Explorer: Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum
The Hellfire Pass Memorial Museum was built and is maintained by the Australian government. The Museum opened in 1998 and is located just above Hellfire Pass (Konyu Cutting) and is dedicated to the Allied prisoners of war and Asian laborers who suffered and died at Hellfire Pass and elsewhere in the Asia Pacific region during World War II.
Hellfire Pass is part of the Thailand–Burma Railway, a 415 kilometers (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. The conditions of the Prisoners and Asian laborers working on the railway were extreme and many died. But the conditions in the Hellfire Pass area were the harshest, with much rock to cut by hand and some explosives. It is estimated that 90,000 of the Asian workers died and 12,621 Allied POWs died during the construction of the railway. The POWs who died included 6,904 British, 2,802 Australians, 2,782 Dutch, and 133 Americans soldiers.
It is reported that as many as 700 prisoners died in the Hellfire Pass area alone. The area was not big but the work was treacherous and physically grueling. Also some 70 prisoners were reported to be beaten to death.
War Museum - Kanchanaburi, Thailand
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
War Museum Kanchanaburi
This museum is located next to the famous bridge on the River Kwai.
Read more at:
Travel blogs from War Museum:
- ... Anyway the east, we visited two war museums on a hired ped, one that was particularly informative about what happened here in Kanchanaburi ...
- ... Burmese, Thais, Malays, etc) Walk over the bridge, visit the war cemetery and the JEATH War Museum and have some lunch (maybe on a floating restaurant) ...
- ... Along the way we saw the Kanchanaburi War Cemetary, the JEATH war museum, and the infamous Bridge Over the River Kwai ...
- ... So, not being in the mood for any more war museums we upped and headed east to the old capital Ayattuya ...
- ... Kanchanaburi features also 3 war museums, 2 war cemeteries, a national museum, a historical park, hot springs, some worth seeing Thai and Chinese temples and ...
- ... the wrong direction for some km because they want to switch directions At the River Kwai we went to see the 2nd World War Museum and the bridge the Japanese let their thai war -prisoners built Later that evening we had dinner on a floating restaurant ...
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- Kanchanaburi, Thailand
Photos in this video:
- Fran and Peter in the River Kwai War Museum by Peterandfran from a blog titled onwards..
- The gang at the Jeath War museum by Saundh from a blog titled Day 4: Up to Kanchanaburi
- A sign in the Jeath War museum by Saundh from a blog titled Day 4: Up to Kanchanaburi
- Me at the Jeath War museum by Saundh from a blog titled Day 4: Up to Kanchanaburi
- Train at war museum by Travelingdiva from a blog titled River Kwai and Tiger Temple
- Chunkai War Museum by Disoriented from a blog titled Museums and Memorials
- Bike at war museum by Travelingdiva from a blog titled River Kwai and Tiger Temple
- Allied War Museum by Disoriented from a blog titled Museums and Memorials
- Jeath War Museum by Helsh from a blog titled Bridge over the river Kwai
- JEATH War Museum by Disoriented from a blog titled Museums and Memorials
- Jeath War Museum by Chrismole from a blog titled Bridge over the river Kwai, waterfall and tigers!
- War Museum by Sianeth from a blog titled Bridge over the River Kwai and Tiger Temple Tour
- War Museum by Weebleandbob from a blog titled Elephants and Tigers
- War museum by Travelingdiva from a blog titled River Kwai and Tiger Temple
Entrance, Thailand History Museum, World War II and JEATH War Museum, Kanchanaburi
19 - Kanchanaburi War Cemetery - Thailand (Jon De Leon)
Saeng Chuto Road, Kanchanaburi 71000, Thailand -
(This War Cemetery is also known as the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery. It is located opposite Kanchanaburi's Railway Station on Saengchootoe Road. It contains the remains of 6,982 Australian, Dutch and British war prisoners who lost their lives during the construction of the Death Railway)
Video Blog - Jeath War Museum, Kanchanabury. Thailand Death Railway
We did a video blog record from the Jeath War Museum in Kanchanaburi. Next to the Bridge over the River Kwai. It was a very moving experience. The museum deserves better support.