I’m Japanese and I also visited Kanchanaburi in 2018. I saw their bridge and the museum as well. I learned a lot from their museum and your videos as well. Hope can share about this bad history to the future kids to make this world peaceful!
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
I wanted to share some of the knowledge that I gained from my few days in Kanchanaburi via the museums, memorials, and online content such as the documentary 'The True Story of the Bridge on the River Kwai' . I hope you find this of interest and I apologize if any of my presentation is incorrect, I also felt I couldn't tell the whole story, and I left out a lot of the details of exactly how the soldiers were treated. If you would like to find out more the description has a list of places and content that you can find out much more information on exactly what happened here in Kanchanaburi. ❤❤✌❤❤
@Franky-zc3xx2 жыл бұрын
I highly recommend visiting Pilok further on that direction. Hin Dat hot spring is nice too.
@niccymak82432 жыл бұрын
Anyone who has seen the film will have learnt nearly nothing about what happened here. I live in Kanchanaburi and the story and the place deserve your time. Colonel Bogie and American heroes - forget it.
@bertvanderkooij28862 жыл бұрын
Paddy this upload must be one of your best. You obviously have a talent for teaching. I would love to see you do more videos like this one and tell us more about Thai history.
@KeepGoingPlaces2 жыл бұрын
Great job with this video, Paddy. It’s difficult to summarize a story like this and you did it really well. We learned a few things from this. Thank you!
@mickwhittaker70702 жыл бұрын
Many thanks for sharing this,Paddy. My father was here in 1946 as part of the Allied effort to repatriate the remaining P.O.W.s You have told me more than he ever did as he never ever wanted to talk about it again. It caused him to have nightmares until he died in 2010. After leaving Kanchanaburi he continued on to Japan as part as of the guard on The Imperial Palace as Hirohito was under house arrest. Once again many thanks.
@Krustyclown5791 Жыл бұрын
you should go. you would like it. lots of western food if ya dnt like Thai food. worth a trip
@samueltownsend15692 жыл бұрын
My first visit there was 30 years ago very emotional walking through the cemetery and looking at all the headstones. The bridge over the river Kwai was probably the first that a lot of people in the west had even heard about Thailand as it was immortalized in the movie which by the way was best picture of the year and won an Oscar. Here’s a little bit of history to ponder. In 1957 Yul Brynner won the Academy award for best actor in The King and I. Followed up by Alec Guinness winning the Oscar for best actor in 1958 for The bridge over the River Kwai. It also won an Oscar that year for best movie. I wonder how many people even knew about Thailand prior to these two movies coming out in the late 50s, what a coincidence that In 1959 the first governmental tourist authority was formed. Thailand had no organised tourism industry until the late-1950s. In that era, Bangkok had about 800 tourist-standard rooms to serve its 40,000 foreign visitors per year. Oh how the times have changed. By the way nice work on covering the history in a separate episode. Other movies that brought attention to Thailand were the “man with the golden gun” James Bond 007. Another big one was “the beach” with Leonardo DiCaprio that came out in 1999 if I remember correctly I remember seeing it in southern Thailand the theater was packed on opening night, And more recently “the hangover”. Just to name a few.
@Craftentrepreneurialexpert2 жыл бұрын
Wow…you have a great memory and knowledge.
@wisarut.nualkaew2 жыл бұрын
Another Chinese movie “Lost in Thailand” in 2013 it made Thailand super popular with Chinese tourists.
@ian-wu2bb2 жыл бұрын
@@wisarut.nualkaew yes good memory. The golden gun one I was a little kid about 13
@wisarut.nualkaew2 жыл бұрын
@@ian-wu2bb I grew up with Pierce Brosnan 007. 😅
@roni27152 жыл бұрын
On the subject of movies, I believe 'The King and I' is still banned in Thailand, something about being disrespectful/falsehoods to the former King Mongkut. Regardless, RIP and my respect.
@Black_Country_Chad Жыл бұрын
Great video !! My great uncle died of dysentery and malaria while building the death railway he is now in the kanchanaburi war cemetery he was only 24
@PaddyDoyle. Жыл бұрын
Thanks 🙏 sorry for your loss
@davidcolinburt2 жыл бұрын
Re the teacher / storyteller aspect. Your style reminds me of one of my high-school teachers named Mr Brown. He held the class intrigued as history unfolded before us. We couldn't wait to come to the next class because he did a masterful job of foreshadowing what was to come. You've left any of the nasty details up to our imagination if we dare go there. Well done. Thank you. dcb
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for that David!
@bertvanderkooij28862 жыл бұрын
Absolutely agree on that !! I would really like to see more of this side of Paddy. Informative storytelling…
@guidofester54512 жыл бұрын
I visited Thailand in October 2017 and missed so many attractions. Your videos are very educational and awe inspiring. We need an index and a brief breakdown of each video for each province. Hoping to visit again when the world returns to normal. My retirement plans have changed and I want to spend my vacation and later my retirement in Thailand visiting all the provinces. Thanks Paddy for your wonderful videos.
@julianmeek21569 ай бұрын
My great-uncle, Norman Reuben James Davey was one of the 1000 men taken from the Nakhon Pathom hospital camp to work here. He died, sadly, at Nong Hin Camp on August 29, 1945 shortly after liberation and is buried at Kanchanaburi War Cemetery. He was only 29. I regret never knowing him, but bear no anger towards the people of Japan, whose literature and culture fascinate me. We must have peace.
@ianhawkes44082 жыл бұрын
Paddy, this is the best ever! More, more, more please. You are “Paddy THE Teacher”
@gerd772 жыл бұрын
Hi Paddy, you managed to wrap this heartbreaking story gracefully in your video. My wife, with whom I have been married for 25 years, comes from Kanchanaburi and I have of course been to all these places several times and know this sad story too. Your video is an excellent complement to a video that Pete "Thairish Times" made as "A Hero Story" about a month ago. Living in the present one should not overlook the past because something like this should never happen again, especially at this time when the cold war seems to flare up again in Europe... Thank you very much for this great video. Greetings from Sattahip - Gerd 🌈🍀💖🌴🌈
@gailbowman74922 жыл бұрын
Oh Paddy, this was so interesting and well told. My father was a Japanese prisoner of war (British Army) and was put into Changi prison. He too worked on the Burma railway. I had a little teary listening to the story but you told it from all sides very well. Thanks again.
@TechTravelEat6 ай бұрын
You narrated it well. Informative 😊
@PaddyDoyle.6 ай бұрын
Thank you! 🙂
@markriggall77412 жыл бұрын
Excellent insight into what those poor souls endured! I recently walked 100km from hellfire pass to Kanchanburi war cemetery. Following the railway to Kanchanburi war memorial cemetery where my great uncle is buried. A very humbling experience it was!
@annalenapirothmaclean55572 жыл бұрын
Well done Paddy. Respectfully told, considerate to all angles of this unfortunate event in history. A difficult job very well done.
@travelingaussie2 жыл бұрын
Very school teacher like but really enjoyed this video. I have attended ANZAC day a number of times at Hell Fire Pass an extremely moving experience. Well done to the Australian Government.
@missSilje2 жыл бұрын
This is really an important story and you’re telling it in a very interesting way 😀 It’s easy getting lost in your words and wanting to get to know the whole story of what actually happened. Thank you so much for sharing, Paddy 🙏🏻❤️ You are my favourite teacher for sure 🤓😇❤️ Keep up the good work 👌
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
The links in the description will help if you need more information and THANKS!
@missSilje2 жыл бұрын
@@PaddyDoyle. this is so interesting that I’ve watched it 4 times now… 🙈🙈
@joefrei86322 жыл бұрын
Hi Paddy! Thank you very much for this video. I really appreciate that you offered this topic a separate video. I was deeply touched when visiting this museum some 15 years ago and highly recommend everyone to step into the Hellfire Pass Centre to learn more and feel more about the circumstances and the historical background. I highly support your decision to add this due to its portentous topic “untypical” video to your channel. This is what makes your channel worthwhile: authenticity. You got the feeling that this topic was important - and so it was. Thumbs up! Looking forward to seeing next “happy travel” videos. But in the same way to emotional things in any direction along your road. Keep on rolling!
@neildyke83182 жыл бұрын
Paddy some very good reading material. 1. A life for every sleeper. 2. Australian Prisoners of war 3. Burma Thai Railway 1942 - 1943. If you go into the first museum south of the bridge, go past the locomotive and to the left of the aircraft, there is a small remains of the original wooden bridge. Love your work
@mikew99992 жыл бұрын
Great summarizing of the history and significance of the railroad. I was able to walk the Hellfire Pass route and it is very sobering. There is a point beyond which one is told you need special permission to go, and a special radio, because it is really getting into the wilderness and becomes a very dangerous trek, and the park rangers want to keep tabs on anyone who may go missing because of an accident. We started walking that part of the route a little bit, but the farther we went, the more I got scared in case something really did happen to us because it was a bit dodgy scrambling over loose rocks and such, and we didn't have the special permission, nor the two-way radio. Beautiful views of the mountains of Myanmar in the near distance though. The museum at the pass is very informative, as is the museum back in the city near the cemetery. We hopped a train near that waterfall and took it back into the city, and across the replica bridge, and then disembarked from the train and walked across the bridge, whistling the theme song from the movie "Bridge on the River Kwai." One interesting thing to note: The river there was not actually named River Kwai, it had a different name, But Pierre Boule's book misnamed it, and in order to capitalize on the potential tourist trade, the Thai government renamed the river to Kwai Noi, so the bridge there really does now go over the River Kwai (Noi). The bridge is a re-built bridge, but there are some sections of the bridge that are the original parts, and the guide books will tell you what to look for to determine what is original. All in all, this was a wonderful and very informative video. Thank you. Can't wait to see your video about the recreational aspects of Kanchanaburi province, because in addition to a history lesson, the province is beautiful and lots of fun recreational opportunities.
@barbaraparker72 жыл бұрын
Dear Paddy, my partner and I stayed at a hotel beside the bridge at Kanchanaburi early last month. While there I realised how little I know, so I started researching on the Internet. Unfortunately I found a lot of information that left me a bit muddled. I found a video on you tube by the grand daughter of Brigadier Sir Philip Toosey. Brigadier Toosey was the man that Alec Guinness role in the film, Bridge on the river Kwai, was very loosely based on. I was so interested that I bought the book, The Colonel of Tamarkan. I haven't finished it yet but it is a book well worth reading with an insight to what happened in those terrible times. Kanchanaburi is a lovely area to visit but tinged with sadness from the past. Paddy, thank you for your video, it is very well presented and informative.
@texasruss2 жыл бұрын
You did a great job on this one Paddy. These poor souls should always be remembered. It's frightening what people are capable of doing to each other.
@mscherf12 жыл бұрын
Great story. My wife and I visited Kanchanaburi a few years ago. The museum was an eye opener. We took the train from Kanchanaburi to Nam Tok. This took us over the wooden viaduct mentioned in the movie. As a strange coincidence, the weeks leading up to us leaving NZ, there were movies and documentaries about the bridge and the treatment of prisoners during that period of history. It helped us understand better what we were seeing during our trip. One movie which is worth seeing is The Railway Man with Colin Firth. It shows the mans struggle during the war and how he came face to face with one of the people responsible for the pain and suffering during that period.
@TerryCollier7332 жыл бұрын
Probably the most respectful and informative video I have seen on this subject and others like it, many thanks.
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Wow I'm really happy to hear that because I was really worried I might have miss spoke or something similar. Appreciate it 😊
@billmoeller88972 жыл бұрын
You outdid yourself on this one. I learned a few more things about this part of history thanks to you, and I am 76. You are a great teacher !
@aussieneil2 жыл бұрын
G'day Paddy, well done mate. You've just been anointed an honorary Aussie. 🇦🇺🇬🇧🇹🇭
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Thanks mate 😊
@huwthomas64302 жыл бұрын
You have made a great video on a very difficult subject matter and you were right in keeping it solely about the history of the death railway. Despite a small battle at Prachuap Kiri Khan, when an invading Japanese force was repelled by a small Thai army force, the Thais signed a Treaty of Accord allowing the Japanese into Thailand...keeping Thailand's proud record of not being colonised by another country. The Japanese used mainly Burmese and Malay labour along with POWs and its important to remember that over 100,000 of these perished and are buried in simple graves alongside the tracks of the railway (as far as I'm aware there's no memorial to their sacrifice which is extremely sad). It's a shame you didn't visit the Wang Pho Viaduct an amazing feat of engineering built by POWs and civilian labour surrounded by astounding beauty, a contrast typical of this area...incredible beauty entwined with incredible sorrow. Nevertheless, your video was incredibly tasteful but also thought provoking...well done again Paddy 😁👍👏👏
@Bennykaay2 жыл бұрын
Being from Germany we’re mostly taught what the war was like here in Europe and all the horrible things Jewish people had to go through. It’s unbelievable and heartbreaking to see that big parts of Asia were also on fire. I thought that video was very well done and informative!
@thepeppercorn61492 жыл бұрын
Hi Paddy, thanks for doing the video on Hellfire Pass. I suggested that might like to do something about it several months ago. ( I am the retired Royal New Zealand Navy guy who visited there with the Australian Defence Force back in about 2005.) Your video was very moving and obviously you had done a lot of research and put considerable thought into how to treat a subject that is still sensitive to many people. I am glad to see that you have received so many positive and supportive comments. Bravo Zulu. (Navy speak for Well Done. )
@climbtherainbow2 жыл бұрын
I'm just back from Thailand and I visited Kanchanaburi and Hellfire Pass with my sister. We did the full walk from the Interpretation Centre to Hintok Road and back. Very tough, humid and hot. We had plenty of water but it gave us something of an appreciation of the hell these guys endured building this railway.
@adriennethenomad2 жыл бұрын
One of your best videos, Paddy. I have goose bumps imagining the angst those men endured. Thank you for presenting it so poignantly.
@gtan431 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Paddy, really well told. As a former British Serviceman of 30 year's now living over here, you've done an excellent job. Thank you so very much old chap.
@familydutton65682 жыл бұрын
Wow! This video was so respectfully done. I really enjoyed this format, it should be called 'Next Level Documentary'. You made me forget that I was just watching a video on KZbin...all while learning about the tragic history of the Thai people. Well done. You have honored their memory in a very kind, humble and beautiful way. Thank you.
@omarkrod26682 жыл бұрын
Paddy thank you for made my day. I missed Thailand so much. Made me cry every times I can’t be there right now hopefully soon. I hope I running to you when I make it back to mother’s home again. So paddy I love you thank you.
@andrewrobinson25652 жыл бұрын
The curator who set up that museum is a very clever communicator. 🙏
@tyecritchlow5622 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paddy for this video. In February 2001 my gf and I experienced the history of Kanchanaburi also..the museums, the war memorial cemetery and Hellfire Pass left a lasting impression of the awful treatment of Allied POWs and local Thai and Burmese people. The movie Railway Man is about British POWs and was very moving.. your subscribers would probably like to watch it..Thanks again this video brought back many memories.
@antruok49502 жыл бұрын
Top shelf PD - your commentary & editing on this is better than many docos 👌 one of your best - Thanks 🍻👊😎👌🙏👍
@lesiamany3391 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! Gréât job bring history to us!
@dover1212 жыл бұрын
Your best work. Australians see this episode as an important part of their military history. A sacred place for many.
@ryansanderson91752 жыл бұрын
Classy not moving away from the history in order to add excitement 🙌🏻
@moniekfalck70894 ай бұрын
I just commented on your most recent vlog... Thank you for telling us more about the history of this region. This is emotional to watch. Unfortunately my Dutch Indonesian grandfather has suffered a lot under the Japanese imprisonment, forced to building this railway.. 😢
@jenniferlucas46512 жыл бұрын
We are keen followers of your channel and as a couple of boomers in Australia particularly enjoyed your telling of this compelling part of history. The suffering and hardship of these young men is beyond comprehension. You told their story with such great respect and compassion.
@ian-wu2bb2 жыл бұрын
good on you for not doing the selfie stick thing . Great vid boyo!!
@Saralouise94 ай бұрын
Because of your recommendations and my generation referenceing the movie ..Bridge over the River Kwai, I am excited to see this history.
@jefftomodachi39892 жыл бұрын
I thought this was your best video yet because you navigated such a tough subject with amazing sensitivity and thoughfullness. You are a true diplomat with a teachers heart!! I'm a 63 year old 3rd generation-Japanese American. As a person of Japanese heritage, I am alert to the atrocities Japan committed during WWII and the older I get, the more terrible things I learn. I heard about the stories this video, but the perspective and context you provided for how these things came about made a lot of sense to me. For a long time I had a couldn't understanding how Japan could've been so cruel and I still have a tough time with that, but the way you explain the situation in Japan at the time and about Emperor Hirohito put some of the pieces of the puzzle together for me. I ditto everyones compliments that wrote before me and appreciate their insights. Khaawp-khun khrap!
@arnauldplouy47432 жыл бұрын
One of your best vlog ! I loved it. Thanks for your very interesting details and for your emotions. You’re the best. A bit disappointed that your trip is arriving shortly to its end. I love Thailand and hope to come back again with all the very interesting details of your videos !
@cornelisadrop2 жыл бұрын
This is why I subscribed to your channel 1 year ago. Great teacher combined with my beloved country.
@ItsJass2 жыл бұрын
Man I really really really like these kind of video, I'm sick of all these vloggers doing the same boring food videos, this is the real deal, history!
@pawspaws1012 жыл бұрын
As a Australian I've heard so much about this, But I have not experienced it, or seen such a walk though! You have made me very proud that our people help fund this very important exhibit! I have few words right now, but this level of respect and detail you put into this post I respect! Thankyou! Biased: I think this is one of your best ever!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@wycheee2 жыл бұрын
Very moving movie Paddy you have captured the feeling so well 😔 Very informative too. Well done this will help keep alive a part of history that should never be forgotten.
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching Mark!
@petercross69602 жыл бұрын
Very nicely narrated Khru Paddy. Been there twice, going again with my son hopefully this year. This vlog will be a great source for him to learn the subject before we go.
@williamjusick24042 жыл бұрын
Great job. Hats off to an awesome storyteller!
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Will! ✌
@destinationsapart2 жыл бұрын
A very well narrated story about Hellfire Pass, probably one of the best videos about it on youtube
@303clear2 жыл бұрын
Well done. You and Pete of Thairish Times have done an excellent job giving a feel of the history and suffering during the war.
@michaelbenjamin82 жыл бұрын
This was a really great video , first class . Thanks for taking time to cover this story the way it should be done.
@pawspaws1012 жыл бұрын
Iv'e watched this 3 times now and get more from it! DO MORE OF THIS !
@craigstrike30232 жыл бұрын
Well done Paddy. RESPECT. The generations of our forefathers experienced life that we can never appreciate and we should forever be grateful to them for their sacrifices. It really does make our perceived problems to be totally insignificant.
@stocktrend8392 жыл бұрын
You are a good story teller. History well narrated. Thanks for the research and history of that railway. Much appreciated .
@loraexplorer36532 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this video. It‘s interesting to get to know some history aspects - but in a nicely compressed way! Thanks for that. Also: this haircut looks great on you, Paddy!
@Joblovenuk2 жыл бұрын
Good editing and your conclusion about story of this rail line was pretty clear
@Angusmum2 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for this documentary and enlightenment regarding the Far East War within WW2. An additional piece of information you may not know was that Prime Minister Winston Churchill withheld Air support from Singapore in order to support troops in Europe and thus protect the British Isles from invasion by Germany. My father was fighting in the battle for Singapore and told me the story of when General Wavell arrived during the fight for Singapore and promised that help was coming and that the sky over Singapore would be “dark with allied planes” then promptly hopped on to a plane and left Singapore. No planes ever arrived to provide air cover for the fighting men on the ground. I can relate here that every surviving soldier in Singapore at that time remembered the betrayal, which wasn’t so much that aeroplane cover couldn’t be spared to help, but that Churchill allowed the lie to persist that Singapore could have been saved and did not admit his own part in the deception. Some so-called historians omit this info. Thankfully, the maligned General Percival, who had been left with no choice but to surrender his soldiers to the Japanese in Singapore, survived the years of being a prisoner of war and was able to go to Parliament after the war and tell the true story of why Singapore fell, including revealing the lack of even a single helpful aeroplane. Then MP’s knew the truth and eventually awarded him a knighthood. The British government did not seem to want the true story of how the soldiers, who became Prisoners of War in Thailand and Burma, suffered and after Liberation the survivors were issued with paper instructions titled “ Guard Your Tongue”. These were orders that the soldiers returning home should not reveal to relatives the details of how prisoners suffered and died in captivity. I unearthed this paperwork myself at the Kew Archives and sent it to the Daily Mail who published its contents in the Letters page. Post WW2, with regard to the “Death Railway”, a man named Rod Beatty saw that it was in danger of being forgotten when it began to be covered over again by the jungle so he and his wife began to clear the growth in order to preserve the railway. The British government had seemed to be content to let what happened in the jungle Japanese POW camps fade into oblivion. Also, it is no accident that it was the Australians who began to preserve “Hellfire Pass” in remembrance of their own countrymen as well as the British and Dutch soldiers who slaved and died there. And, on a personal level, in remembrance of my Dad who was there, I thank God for the Australian endeavours in ensuring that this part of the history of WW2 in the Far East is memorialised.
@danstropicalquest2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic video Paddy! You really are a great teacher. You pesented facts to show each sides mindset and reasons why they reacted how they did. You really create a thirst for more knowledge.
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much
@gazh99132 жыл бұрын
Fantastic job paddy! U did a tremendous job honouring the history here and giving context to the province which should never be forgotten. Nice one
@brendandaly53582 жыл бұрын
Great video. My father was prisoner work on the railway and at Hellfire pass. Been there many times. Very spiritual place. The bond made here between the prisoners shaped their lives and lasted until they died.
@unemployedrobots2 жыл бұрын
Heavy place the death and war museum was a great experience of my life I remember jumping off the top of the bridge into the water with my friend Trent from Perth and my feet hit the sand at the bottom of the Kwai river beautiful video 🤙🏽👊🏽
@tonyvalentine36032 жыл бұрын
Excellent video paddy....very important for people to know this history....well done.
@simoncoghlan1586 Жыл бұрын
Hellfire pass is an amazing piece of history, Great video Paddy, & well done to the Australian Government.
@effie-Toronto2 жыл бұрын
Excellent information thank you so much
@ItsThaithings2 жыл бұрын
Oh wow...I'm impressed with your footages of this video. You're awesome
@mirandamcartier2 жыл бұрын
Your Teacher skills are on point Paddy. Amazing video and narrative
@ian-wu2bb2 жыл бұрын
Watched it again as I often watch your stuff multiple times. I have seen a number of utubers do this one . I think Thailand bound was the last I saw . You did an epic job . It is very apparent how your making the effort to evolve your channel . Great stuff Paddy.
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Thanks mate 😊
@ian-wu2bb2 жыл бұрын
@@PaddyDoyle. most welcome
@specialized5002 жыл бұрын
Been there 3 times and still found your video interesting . Well done
@patrickbouquet37192 жыл бұрын
Best of all your videos👍 Thanks for being back on the road.
@vredeling2 жыл бұрын
My (Dutch) grandfather was one of the people who have worked here. It took many years to realize that even my generation is carrying the weight of trauma that was never spoken about. Thank you for this great video.
@stevens87852 жыл бұрын
One of your best albeit a very sombre vlog. You presented that brilliantly Paddy and I learnt plenty. Thankyou so much :)
@vuetracom2 жыл бұрын
Very informative for someone visiting Kanchanaburi. Hats off. 💯
@willdodd67062 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paddy, a good rehearsal of some of the cultural factors that led to the brutality of the POW's treatment. Being a child of the generation who fought that war, I knew a bit about how the POWs were treated, but hadn't really understood much about the reasons. Good to hear a more balanced account of the events, it doesn't detract from the grimness but focuses on the awfulness of war itself rather than blame and hatred toward the former enemy which was almost inevitably part of my parent's generation's account. Interesting and well made video (despite the minor anachronism of the references to 'jets' 🙂)
@BuddyBoy68Ай бұрын
Good wee video about an extraordinary place. I visited Hellfire Pass in November 2014, and it was certainly an experience I will never forget. I appreciated it even more by the fact I had watched The Railway Man film with Colin Firth and Nicole Kidman, who both visited the site in the film. Æ 🙏
@teresabarberot25062 жыл бұрын
War is horrific and heartbreaking. Never seems to end. Thank you for telling the factual side of this time in history. Through your travels I have learned so much about Thailand. You are an excellent teacher and storyteller. Your students must have learned so much from you.
@yorkpa37672 жыл бұрын
Well done and respectful approach to this regions not too distant past. A walk thru the cemetary there is a somber reminder of that tragic time. Well done.
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the positive feedback 👍
@mariawilliams38112 жыл бұрын
Wow, Paddy what a great vid. It was too short. Amazing how you kept me glued. I Loved the history. Keep going Mr Doilie 😂😂😂.
@stephencartwright30652 жыл бұрын
Visited there in 2019 and as an Aussie found it very moving. What our soldiers went through was sheer hell. Thanks for telling this incredible story of bravery and suffering.
@michaelhayden725 Жыл бұрын
I was there in 2096 and yes all of the images here: the cemetery; the bridge and last but by no means least Hellfire Pass. All three places brought tears. Oh the museum was also worth your time!
@STEFLiveTube2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for a good presentation of some important history on my new home Thailand. A close friends grandfather was a POW. Very sad.
@stevedakin75433 ай бұрын
Great video paddy my grandfather was in Burma in the second world war and never spoke about it, i guess he thought it's not the kind of thing to tell grandchildren about
@larshultberg69722 жыл бұрын
I visited some years ago. Important to remember and tell future generations. Good video.
@jj-if6it2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this, it's a great little history lesson and refresher
@donnaleecriss50232 жыл бұрын
tastefully done Paddy. History is connected to our present day life the good and the bad. I liked the 2 part video. thanks
@kcpd45732 жыл бұрын
One of the best videos you’ve made.
@bucketlistadventures19542 жыл бұрын
Great video Paddy, thank you for doing this. One of my favorite videos.
@nzcambo Жыл бұрын
Terrific video and tastefully done. I went to Hellfire Pass about 5 years ago and I am planning to go back to Kanchanaburi and Hellfire Pass again next year so can stay longer there. Would be nice to meet any of your followers there as well. I'm there at the end of March (Easter 2024). Keep up the great work.
@roninr819910 ай бұрын
I am going next month. In 2017 took train to kanchnaburi and returned back on afternoon train. This time going to stay there for 3 to 4 days and explore more.
@dustyrider2442 жыл бұрын
Well done Paddy, that was a very well researched and poignant account of the story, great to see you back on your travels and especially in Kanchanaburi which is possibly my favorite place to visit for many reasons.
@PaddyDoyle.2 жыл бұрын
I'm so happy to hear that, thanks 😊
@dustyrider2442 жыл бұрын
@@PaddyDoyle. I just watched the interview with the young Irish lad, very good. You spoke about content and how difficult to know what will attract high views. I would be really interested in how this one does, I suspect you will be really surprised
@peterdob88682 жыл бұрын
This is one of your best videos, excellent, thank you!
@robwatson94052 жыл бұрын
I have enjoyed all your videos, but I really think this one is some of your finest work, thank you Paddy.
@hfc65352 жыл бұрын
Very moving story . Saw the film years ago.well done Paddy
@paulfdobbs2 жыл бұрын
One of your best Paddy, well done 👍
@LeftyWright2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paddy! I have traveled on the railway but didn’t get to Hellfire Pass. God I wish I had but thanks for taste of what I missed.
@promdiinthailand73232 жыл бұрын
Hi there! I'm a filipino fan and been following you. I am inspired to start my own YTC. Thank you Sir Paddy!
@mikeazpiroz92922 жыл бұрын
Well done good Sir. Definitely a must visit. Thanks
@dennyc12052 жыл бұрын
One of the more interesting vids I’ve seen about Kanchanaburi/Hellfire Pass. Good job. 👍
@djscotty532 жыл бұрын
Thanks Paddy. Great video. I took my adult son to hellfire pass in 2006. As a couple of Aussies we found it very moving along with the cemetery in Kanchanaburi.
@andreg427 Жыл бұрын
Very well told and presented! All your videos are great!