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The Death Railway - The Personal Account of Lieutenant Colonel Kappe on the Thai-Burma Railroad (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R553
Discovery Miles 5 530
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The Death Railway - The Personal Account of Lieutenant Colonel Kappe on the Thai-Burma Railroad (Hardcover)
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List price R624
Loot Price R553
Discovery Miles 5 530
You Save R71 (11%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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They had faced the indignity of surrender and the squalor of Changi
prison, so the spirits of the British and American troops lifted
when they were told that they would be transferred to another
healthier location where conditions would be more benign and food
far more abundant. A total of 7,000 men, approximately half British
and half Australian, were to be moved, the men being told that they
would not be compelled to work. As there were not that number of
fit men at Changi, many weak and unwell soldiers formed part of the
group that was designated F' Force. From the outset, the prisoners
realized that none of the promises the Japanese had made would be
fulfilled. Herded into trucks, they were transported on a nightmare
rail journey into Thailand and then marched for hundreds of miles
along a jungle track through the torrential monsoon rains to
miserable camps where there was little in the way of cover or
accommodation. Despite utter exhaustion, upon arrival at the camps,
the men were forced to work on the road and rail links the Japanese
needed to carry supplies and reinforcements for their assault upon
British-held India. With precious little food or medical supplies,
the men soon fell prey to terrible and fatal diseases and soon
hundreds had died. Despite the protests of the British and
Australian officers, conditions in the malaria and cholera infested
camps were utterly horrific. As Lieutenant Colonel Kappe wrote, the
barbarism' they experienced at the hands of the Japanese had never
been equaled in history'. Kappe, therefore, set himself the task of
documenting the atrocities the men of F' Force endured from May to
October 1943, which resulted in more than 3,000 men losing their
lives. His report is reproduced here in full -every disturbing
episode in this almost unbelievable drama, told as he saw and
experienced it at first hand. Rarely has there been such a document
produced in a prisoner of war camp, its survival being as
monumental as the sufferings of the men described in its pages.
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