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  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A small ferry crosses the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry039.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A small ferry crosses the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry042.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  An offering on the bow of a small ferry that takes people acrss the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry038.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  An offering on the bow of a small ferry that takes people acrss the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry030.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  An offering on the bow of a small ferry that takes people acrss the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry031.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A passenger on the small ferry that goes across the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry027.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A passenger on the small ferry that goes across the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry025.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A small ferry crosses the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry041.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Motorcyclists riding a ferry across the River Kwai leave the ferry it docked on the west side of the river. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry037.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A passenger on the small ferry that goes across the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry033.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A passenger on the small ferry that goes across the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry032.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A passenger on the small ferry that goes across the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry028.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: BOM, the operator of a small ferry on the River Kwai near Kanchanaburi. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry026.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A small ferry crosses the River Kwai. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry040.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: BOM, the operator of a small ferry on the River Kwai near Kanchanaburi, chats with one of his passengers. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry035.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: BOM, the operator of a small ferry on the River Kwai near Kanchanaburi, chats with one of his passengers. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry034.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A passenger sits with BOM, the operator of a small ferry on the River Kwai near Kanchanaburi. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry029.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A woman riding a small ferry across the River Kwai takes off her motorcycle helmet. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry024.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A woman riding a small ferry across the River Kwai takes off her motorcycle helmet. The ferry goes across the River Kwai downriver from downtown Kanchanaburi, the site of the famous "Bridge on the River Kwai." Small ferries like this, once common on Thai river crossings, are disappearing because Thailand has dramatically improved its infrastructure since this ferry started operating about 50 years ago. The ferry operator said his grandfather started the ferry, with a small raft he would pole across the river, in the late 1960s. Now his family has a metal boat with an inboard engine. There are large vehicle bridges across the river about 5 miles north and south of this ferry crossing, but for people in rural communities on the west side of the river the ferry is still the most convenient way to cross the river.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry023.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A Chinese temple on the west side of the River Kwai as seen the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry003.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Looking north up the River Kwai from the famous "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry005.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Thai students on a school field trip walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry043.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Looking north up the River Kwai from the famous "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry015.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Thai students on a school field trip walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry044.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: The "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II making the railway between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese.  Thailand has a very advanced rail system and trains reach all parts of the country.        PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry008.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A local woman walks across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry004.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Thai students on a school field trip run in front of a train stopped in the station at the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry021.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry012.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Thai students on a school field trip run in front of a train stopped in the station at the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry022.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: The train station at the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry017.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourist tee shirts for sale at the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry020.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourist hats for sale at the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry019.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A dummy World War II bomb near the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry016.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry014.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry013.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry011.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry010.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: The "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry007.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: The "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.      PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry006.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: The train station at the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry018.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists walk across the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry009.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People take pictures on the "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II constructing the "Death Railway" between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese during World War II.  The bridge is now one of the most famous tourist attractions in Thailand.       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry002.jpg
  • 20 FEBRUARY 2008 -- KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A Thai man uses a "long tailed boat" to get across the River Kwai in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Long tailed boats are common on Thai waterways, the boats are very fast with a shallow draft, making them very maneuverable on the rivers and canals.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
    ThailandKanchanaburi010.jpg
  • 20 FEBRUARY 2008 -- KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists on the "Bridge over the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. The infamous bridge and the "Death Railway" that connected Thailand and Burma were built by Japanese military forces using prisoner of war and slave labor during World War II. More than 200,000 POWs and laborers were used to build the railway, about half of them died during the construction.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
    ThailandKanchanaburi009.jpg
  • 20 FEBRUARY 2008 -- KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists on the "Bridge over the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. The infamous bridge and the "Death Railway" that connected Thailand and Burma were built by Japanese military forces using prisoner of war and slave labor during World War II. More than 200,000 POWs and laborers were used to build the railway, about half of them died during the construction.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
    ThailandKanchanaburi007.jpg
  • 20 FEBRUARY 2008 -- KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Thai school children walk over the "Bridge over the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. The infamous bridge and the "Death Railway" that connected Thailand and Burma were built by Japanese military forces using prisoner of war and slave labor during World War II. More than 200,000 POWs and laborers were used to build the railway, about half of them died during the construction.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
    ThailandKanchanaburi012.jpg
  • 20 FEBRUARY 2008 -- KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists on the "Bridge over the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. The infamous bridge and the "Death Railway" that connected Thailand and Burma were built by Japanese military forces using prisoner of war and slave labor during World War II. More than 200,000 POWs and laborers were used to build the railway, about half of them died during the construction.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
    ThailandKanchanaburi008.jpg
  • 20 FEBRUARY 2008 -- KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists pass a fake bomb as they cross the "Bridge over the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. The infamous bridge and the "Death Railway" that connected Thailand and Burma were built by Japanese military forces using prisoner of war and slave labor during World War II. More than 200,000 POWs and laborers were used to build the railway, about half of them died during the construction.  Photo by Jack Kurtz
    ThailandKanchanaburi011.jpg
  • 07 JANUARY 2013 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A vendor runs across the tracks while a Thai passenger train crosses "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II making the railway between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese.  Thailand has a very advanced rail system and trains reach all parts of the country.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KanchanaburiTrain020.jpg
  • 07 JANUARY 2013 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Tourists photograph a Thai passenger train on "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II making the railway between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese.  Thailand has a very advanced rail system and trains reach all parts of the country.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KanchanaburiTrain019.jpg
  • 09 JANUARY 2019 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:       PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KwaiBridgeFerry036.jpg
  • 07 JANUARY 2013 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:    A passenger train pulls into the station at the Bridge on the River Kwai station in Kanchanburi, Thailand. Thailand has a very advanced rail system and trains reach all parts of the country.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    KanchanaburiTrain021.jpg
  • 07 JANUARY 2013 - KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: The "Bridge On the River Kwai" in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Hundreds of thousands of Asian slave laborers and Allied prisoners of war died in World War II making the railway between Bangkok and Rangoon (now Yangon), Burma (now Myanmar) for the Japanese.  Thailand has a very advanced rail system and trains reach all parts of the country.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, pauses at the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, pauses at the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay018.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  JERRY KARWACKI, (right) from the Veterans of Foreign Wars post in Bangkok, Thailand, salutes with a veteran of the British Commonweath during the wreath laying at the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay044.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay039.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay034.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People at the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Scottish veterans of the British army look for the headstones of Scottish soldiers buried in Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay017.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay004.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, salutes after placing a wreath on a memorial for soldiers killed working on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay042.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man leaves flowers on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay015.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery  during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay038.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Veterans lay to wait wreaths during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People at the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: ARCHIE DUNLOP (center), 95 years old, a British veteran of World War II, is helped into the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: People walk through the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, leaves a cross on the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, leaves a cross on the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Scottish veterans of the British army look for the headstones of Scottish soldiers buried in Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A British flag on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  The headstone of a World War II Commonwealth soldier in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  J.P. VAN DER MEULEN, left, a veteran of the Dutch Navy, walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery before the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US..     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, salutes after placing a wreath on a memorial for soldiers killed working on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, salutes after placing a wreath on a memorial for soldiers killed working on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  Thai buglers play during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: STEWART WILSON, a Scottish veteran of the British army, pauses at the grave of a Scottish soldier killed on the "Death Railway" during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A Scottish veteran of the British army looks for the headstones of Scottish soldiers buried in Kanchanaburi War Cemetery during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.     PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man leaves flowers on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery  during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay013.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A man walks through Kanchanaburi War Cemetery  during the Rememberance Day ceremony in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.   PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay012.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: A British flag on a headstone during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay009.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND:  GARTH O’CONNELL, left from Australia, and his friend, SOKO TAMIKA, pray at the grave of O'Connell's great uncle, an Australian aboriginal soldier, killed working on the "Death Railway" and buried in the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand, during Rememberance Day observations. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay003.jpg
  • 11 NOVEMBER 2018 - KANCHANABURI, KANCHANABURI, THAILAND: Scottish veterans of the British army during the Rememberance Day ceremony at the Kanchanaburi War Cemetery in Kanchanaburi, Thailand. Kanchanaburi is the location of the infamous "Bridge On the River Kwai" and was known for the "Death Railway" built by Japan during World War II using allied, principally British, Australian and Dutch, prisoners of war as slave labor. There are 6,982 people buried in the cemetery, including 5,000 Commonwealth soldiers and 1,800 Dutch soldiers. November 11, 2018 marked the 100th anniversary of the end of World War I, celebrated as Rememberance Day in the UK and the Commonwealth and Veterans' Day in the US.    PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
    RememberanceDay032.jpg
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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