Capas National Shrine | |
---|---|
Philippines | |
For Filipino and American soldiers who were interned at Camp O'Donnell at the end of the Bataan Death March | |
Established | 7 December 1991[1][2] |
Unveiled | 9 April 2003[3] |
Location | 15°20′56″N 120°32′43″E / 15.34891°N 120.545246°E |
Total burials | 30,000+ (around 25,000 Filipinos and 6,000 Americans)[4] |
"This memorial is dedicated to the brave men and women who defied the might of the invaders at Bataan, Corregidor and other parts of the Philippines during World War II. Thousands died in battle, during the Death March, and while in captivity. Thousands more endured inhuman conditions at the prison camp in Capas, Tarlac. They suffered in the night so that their countrymen would wake to the dawn of freedom." | |
Statistics source: Philippine Veterans Affairs Office |
The Capas National Shrine (Filipino: Pambansang Dambana ng Capas) in Barangay Aranguren,[5] Capas, Tarlac, Philippines was built by the Philippine government as a memorial to Allied soldiers who were interned at Camp O'Donnell at the end of the Bataan Death March during the Second World War.[6]
The site, which was the former concentration camp for the Allied prisoners,[2] is a focus for commemorations on Araw ng Kagitingan (Valour Day), an annual observance held on 9 April—the anniversary of the surrender of US and Philippine forces to Imperial Japan in 1942. There is also a memorial inside the site to the Czechs who died fighting alongside the Filipino and US soldiers.[7]
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