ANZAC Dawn Service at Hellfire Pass |
Last week, I was in Kanchanaburi Province, at Hellfire Pass, on the Japanese WWII, Thai-Burma railway. I was there so as to lead the dawn service for ANZAC Day (25th April). Given the history of what happened there, the POWs and Asian slave labourers working under the brutality of such human cruelty, the place is full of human drama and memories. These memories live on in the midst of the silence. To walk down its path is a powerful and moving journey. You can feel who was there - the tortured, suffering souls, labouring on the railway; those many who fell and died. It is truly a place of pilgrimage.
Despite all its tragic history, being there was a deeply spiritual experience. One could harken back and gleam a sense of the horrors that had happened there. Beyond the horrors, I could feel the triumph of the human spirit, over all odds. The memories, their story live on. For me, this sacred place imparted one powerful message, namely, that the human spirit is able to rise above any such terrible suffering. Despite all odds, the human individual can forgive and remember, move forward and act for good.
On the way home, I was honoured to share the journey with Nick, an officer in the Australian Army, assigned to Bangkok. Nick was a breath of fresh air, a man sharing both insights and kindness. The bottom line of a healthy conversation between a soldier and a priest was that decent values matter. Decent human values sustain and nourish life for the good of all.
And so I share a couple of poignant lines, that I read at Hellfire Pass museum. They are the words of the great Stan Arneil, an Australian POW during WWII. He was held in Changi prisoner of war camp, Singapore, where he knew the utter rawness of human existence, but also more importantly a life, that he proudly shared with his mates.
"When a man died , he died in an aura of love and brotherhood ... you died with your head in the lap of a mate, with somebody holding your hand, with somebody with a hand on your forehead, saying a little prayer."
Amen..