Resort Guests Capture Bridge On River Kwai
By David Ellis
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Artist’s perspective of the new U Hotels
& Resorts Inchantree
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Australian prisoners of war who
worked on the Death Railway
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The famous (once infamous) Bridge on the River Kwai
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Memorail at Hellfire Pass on Burma’s Death Railway
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Guests at a deluxe new boutique resort that
opens in Thailand in October of this year can expect a misty-eye, and
possibly goose-bumps down the spine, at least once during their stay.
Because as they take evening cocktails
before a million-dollar sunset view, they’ll also be looking across to
one of the world’s most-emotive and famous structures: The Bridge on
the River Kwai.
Built in 1942-43 as part of Japan’s
horrendous Burma Death Railway that ran 415km from Bangkok to Rangoon,
the iron bridge was just one of many along a route hacked through
mountainous jungle by 60,000 Allied prisoners of war and 180,000
enforced Asian labourers.
And all in a seemingly-impossible 16 months.
Estimates vary, but most historians agree
that around 90,000 Asian labourers died during the building of the
railway, while 16,000 Allied Prisoners of War – British, Australian,
Dutch, Americans and Canadians – also succumbed to brutal conditions
that included stints of working over 30-hours straight to complete the
final stages of the line.
Over 2800 of those who died were Australians.
Many guests to the new U Hotels and Resorts
Inchantree Resort at Kanchanaburi on the banks of the River Kwai and
within view of the Bridge, will doubtless reflect on the history of the
infamous railway as they sip their poolside cocktails, watch the
kingfishers flitting across the now-peaceful waterway, and muse at the
colourful river traffic.
Others will possibly find themselves
thinking back to the 1957 movie Bridge on the River Kwai and its theme
tune, the inspirational but hauntingly-whistled Colonel Bogey March.
But they should not take too much of the
movie as fact. While based on the diabolical conditions imposed on
those forced to build the Death Railway, the major theme of the
destruction of the bridge by prisoners of war that inspired the novel
and the subsequent movie, was pure fiction from the pen of French
writer Pierre Boulle.
Rather than the Bridge on the River Kwai
being blown-up by the POWs who’d built it, sending a trainload of
high-ranking Japanese officers to their deaths, the Bridge was not
destroyed until the American Air Force bombed it in April 1945.
The idea of a railway linking Burma (now
Myanmar) with Thailand was not something new: a line had been muted by
the British in the early 1900s, but shelved as nigh-on impossible in
the mountainous, jungled terrain that was criss-crossed by myriad
rivers and streams.
But when Japan invaded from Thailand and
took Burma from the British in the early 1940s, it found itself with a
confronting problem: supplies for Burma had to come in by sea through
the Strait of Malacca and the Andaman Sea, and both were pretty-much
controlled by the Allies.
So it decided on the rail link between
Bangkok and Rangoon. At any cost.
But when completed the Burma Death Railway
failed to achieve the result Japan wanted, and rather than a 24-hour
stream of trains rushing freight and troops up and down the track, at
the most it could manage just a handful a day.
When the war ended the line was abandoned
and huge sections devoured by the vigorously-growing jungle. But in the
1950s the Thai government re-built about 130km from Kanchanaburi to Nam
Tok that’s open today to local and tourist trains… and Japan gave two
pre-fabricated sections to re-open the Bridge on the River Kwai.
When U Hotels and Resorts’ boutique
Inchantree resort opens at Kanchanaburi in October this year, guests
will be able to look out to the historic Bridge on the River Kwai, muse
back on its past as they watch modern-day trains rumbling across from
Thailand to Myanmar, and take-in the spectacular river sunsets.
The just 26-room river-lodge style resort
will be set around a courtyard dominated by an ancient shady Inchan
tree, and will offer a blend of local heritage and modern amenities,
semi-open-air restaurant, pool, library, internet station, Thai spa,
heritage talks and walks, and even biking tours of the local area.
And interestingly, it will provide guests
with 24hrs use of rooms from whatever hour they check-in, free Wi-Fi,
daily breakfast whenever it suits them – and, thankfully, telephone
calls at actual cost.
Prices will start from a modest US$75 for
24hrs use; see travel agents, or visit www.uhotelsresorts.com
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