KOHIMA WAR CEMETERY
KOHIMA WAR CEMETERY: Kohima, the capital city of Nagaland state, is some 200 kilometres from the Indo-Burmese border (now known as the Indo-Myanmar border). Kohima is best reached by air from Calcutta to Dimapur or from Delhi to Dimapur via Gauhati in Assam State and then by a winding road up the mountains. Kohima is 74 kilometres from Dimapur. It can also be reached by road from Gauhati - a long and difficult journey. Kohima War Cemetery is situated on the left of the Imphal-Diampur road (Highway 39) close to the centre of the town.
VISITING INFORMATION
Kohima War
Cemetery is open everyday 09:00-16:00. The cemetery is completely terraced with
terrace levels ranging from 3 - 5 metres high which makes wheelchair access to
this site impossible.
HISTORY INFORMATION
The Japanese
advance into India was halted at Kohima in April 1944 and Garrison Hill, a long
wooded spur on a high ridge west of the village, was the scene of perhaps the
most bitter fighting of the whole Burma campaign when a small Commonwealth force
held out against repeated attacks by a Japanese Division. The fiercest hand to
hand fighting took place in the garden of the Deputy Commissioner's bungalow,
around the tennis court, but the heaviest casualties on both sides occurred
after relieving forces reached the Garrison and the Japanese were driven off
the ridge, so re-opening the road to Imphal.
KOHIMA WAR
CEMETERY lies on the battle ground of Garrison Hill. No trace remains of the
bungalow, which was destroyed in the fighting, but white concrete lines mark
and preserve permanently the historic tennis court.
The cemetery
now contains 1,420 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War and 1 non-war
burial.
At the
highest point in the cemetery stands the KOHIMA CREMATION MEMORIAL commemorating
917 Hindu and Sikh soldiers whose remains were cremated in accordance with
their faith.
At the lower
end of the cemetery, near the entrance, is a memorial to the 2nd Division. It
bears the inscription; - "When you go home Tell them of us and say, for your
tomorrow, we gave our today."
The cemetery
also contains a memorial to the 2nd Battalion, the Dorsetshire Regiment and a
number of other regimental memorials have been erected on and near Garrison
Hill.
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