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I am glad you mentioned the Asian labourers that died on the Burma railway, Richard, as they are often "airbrushed" out of articles etc on the subject. Mention must also be made of the "Free Thai" resistance who risked their lives to get medical supplies into POW camps on the railway.
2005-12-16 @ 20:33
Comment from: yeows
An excellent blog on Hellfire Pass. I am looking forward to more blogs from your trip.
2005-12-17 @ 02:32
Comment from: ej
i will be back in kanchanaburi next week and definitely will visit hellfire pass. thanks for the blogs richard. i will be staying in bang na, sukhumvit 66/1. i was told samut prakan is not that far. hoe long will the travel be? is it also ok to visit your school? i will be in thailand by december 20.
2005-12-17 @ 07:35
Comment from: Richard Barrow Email · http://www.richardbarrow.com
Thanks for your comments. I probably have at least four more major blogs to do on our visit to Kanchanaburi Province. I will also do a summary blog to help people plan their trip to Kanchanaburi.

@ ej - Yes, Soi 66 is not far from Samut Prakan. You are welcome to come and visit us. You will need to write a brief letter to the principal to state the purpose of your visit - write to "visitor" at sriwittayapaknam.ac.th (without the quotation marks).
2005-12-17 @ 10:22
Comment from: ej
thank you richard. i will be seeing the ancient city and some zoos as well.

i am interested to know curriculum of your school particularly your information technology.
2005-12-17 @ 11:12
Comment from: paul_au
Every year on or around the ANZAC Public Holiday in Australia, they show documentaries on TV about Australian's at war, I remember this year they had a documentary on the building if the Track at Hell Fire Pass, One of the documentary team, carried a rock by hand up an embankment, for the purpose of making foundations for the track, to demonstrate what the POW had to do, he in fact had difficulties doing this with just one rock, so he said it must have been so much harder having to move thousands of rocks in this manner.
2005-12-17 @ 20:23
Comment from: Edwin Kime
It is wonderful how the graves are taken care of. We seem to forget to quickly how these people suffered to keep us free. The story how the Thais supplied the prisoner food and medical supplies is all to soon forgotten. Then the movies like "The Bridge over the River Kwai" leave to many false impressions on the people.
2005-12-18 @ 20:10

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