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The Oscar-winning movie 'Bridge Over the River Kwai' dramatized to
millions the building of the infamous Japanese 'Death Railway' -
the supply line for Japan's planned invasion of India during World
War II. But the movie told only part of the story, giving the
impression that all men working on the line were British. In fact,
668 Americans - serving on the USS Houston and with the Texas
National Guard's Second Battalion - worked alongside the other
Allied troops in the jungle camps. In 'Building the Death Railway',
their story is told for the first time. In 22 interviews with
American survivors, we learn the details of their lengthy ordeal.
Disease, punishment, camaraderie, work conditions and attempts to
escape are described by the men who were there. The story begins
with their capture and ends with their liberation 42 months later.
The Burma-Thailand 'Death Railway' was one of the most horrible
sentences a prisoner of war could endure. Thousands died in the
jungles of Burma. More than 130 Americans - one man in five - never
returned home, victims of neglect, abuse, starvation and disease.
'Building the Death Railway' gives the American perspective on
events that shocked the world.
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